Equatorial Guinea’s Emilio Nsue Outshining Star Names at Cup of Nations

 Equatorial Guinea's Emilio Nsue, celebrates scoring his second goal during the African Cup of Nations Group A soccer match between Ivory Coast and Equatorial Guinea at the Olympic Stadium of Ebimpe in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Monday, Jan. 22, 2024. (AP)
Equatorial Guinea's Emilio Nsue, celebrates scoring his second goal during the African Cup of Nations Group A soccer match between Ivory Coast and Equatorial Guinea at the Olympic Stadium of Ebimpe in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Monday, Jan. 22, 2024. (AP)
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Equatorial Guinea’s Emilio Nsue Outshining Star Names at Cup of Nations

 Equatorial Guinea's Emilio Nsue, celebrates scoring his second goal during the African Cup of Nations Group A soccer match between Ivory Coast and Equatorial Guinea at the Olympic Stadium of Ebimpe in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Monday, Jan. 22, 2024. (AP)
Equatorial Guinea's Emilio Nsue, celebrates scoring his second goal during the African Cup of Nations Group A soccer match between Ivory Coast and Equatorial Guinea at the Olympic Stadium of Ebimpe in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Monday, Jan. 22, 2024. (AP)

Victor Osimhen, Mohamed Salah or Sadio Mane were perhaps the most likely bets to be top marksman at this year's Africa Cup of Nations, but the entirely unexpected name leading the scorers' charts in Ivory Coast has more goals than all of them combined.

Emilio Nsue, the captain of unfancied Equatorial Guinea, goes into a last-16 tie with Guinea on Sunday after netting five times in the group stage.

If he keeps this up, he could break Ndaye Mulamba's record of nine in one AFCON for Zaire in 1974.

"I am ambitious, but to be honest I would sign a contract right now if it said I would be the top scorer," he smiled when that record was mentioned to him in an interview with AFP in Abidjan.

Nsue scored twice in a 4-0 win over the hosts in their final group game, having netted three in a 4-2 win over Guinea-Bissau, the first Cup of Nations hat-trick since 2008.

Ranked 18th in Africa, Equatorial Guinea -- population 1.7 million -- is no footballing hotbed.

But the Central African nation has made remarkable progress over the last decade, spurred on by hosting the AFCON in 2012 and again in 2015, when they reached the semi-finals.

'Strongest in all Africa'

The current side, under softly-spoken coach Juan Micha, is undefeated since June 2022.

"The most important thing, our strong point, is the group, because we are playing almost eight or nine years together, so we are brothers," Nsue said.

"We don't have any superstar, but as a group I think we are the strongest in all Africa."

Nsue is certainly the closest thing they have to a superstar.

Born in Mallorca, he was in a Spain squad that won the Under-21 Euro in 2011 alongside David de Gea, Juan Mata and Thiago Alcantara.

But he opted to represent the country of his father's birth at senior level, at a time when he was playing regularly in La Liga for Mallorca.

"Equatorial Guinea came to me and said: 'Please, you have to come. You are going to be the captain. You are young but we think you are the future'," said Nsue.

"So I thought about that and about everything my father explained to me."

He didn't enjoy the best start, scoring a hat-trick in a 4-3 win over Cape Verde in 2013, only for Equatorial Guinea to be handed a 3-0 defeat because Nsue was, in fact, ineligible.

Yet Nsue, who idolized Samuel Eto'o growing up when the Cameroon legend played for Mallorca, is now a hero in the country.

"The people of Equatorial Guinea are really grateful towards him because you can see how much he loves his country," Micha told AFP.

"It is incredible to have a person like him and I hope he stays with us for a long time."

Getting better with age

However, he will turn 35 this year, so could this be his last AFCON?

"My hero is Cristiano Ronaldo. He is older than me. I care a lot about my body. I like to eat healthily. So for me I don't think it's going to be my last one because I feel better than when I was 20," Nsue said.

Much has been made of his versatility, as a player who was turned into a wing-back by Aitor Karanka at Middlesbrough, where he won promotion to the Premier League in 2016.

"After that, all the coaches said to me I could play everywhere. So last year I played as a central defender, a right-back, striker, midfielder," he said.

"But with my national team, these 12 years, I have played as a striker. Almost all my life I have played as a striker."

Nsue was one of seven members of Equatorial Guinea's line-up against Ivory Coast who were born in Spain, the former colonial power.

He is now playing club football in Spain for third-tier Intercity of Alicante, who took Barcelona to extra time in the Copa del Rey last season.

Nsue is in no hurry to leave his current surroundings, even if his profile has been boosted at the AFCON.

"I'm very happy. I'm scoring goals. For me it is not all about football," he said.

"The life in Alicante is very nice, the weather, for me at 34 years old that is important.

"You never know, maybe tomorrow somebody comes with an offer you can't refuse, but I don't really think about that."



Uruguay Beat Brazil on Penalties to Reach Copa America Semi-finals

Uruguay celebrated a penalty shoot out victory over Brazil in their Copa America quarter-final on Saturday. Robyn Beck / AFP
Uruguay celebrated a penalty shoot out victory over Brazil in their Copa America quarter-final on Saturday. Robyn Beck / AFP
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Uruguay Beat Brazil on Penalties to Reach Copa America Semi-finals

Uruguay celebrated a penalty shoot out victory over Brazil in their Copa America quarter-final on Saturday. Robyn Beck / AFP
Uruguay celebrated a penalty shoot out victory over Brazil in their Copa America quarter-final on Saturday. Robyn Beck / AFP

Uruguay beat Brazil on penalties (4-2) to reach the semi-finals of Copa America after an ugly game ended goalless on Saturday.
Uruguay, who finished the game with ten men after Nahitan Nandez was sent off in the 74th minute, will face Colombia in Charlotte, North Carolina, in their semi-final on Wednesday, said AFP.
Colombia, now unbeaten in 27 games, beat Panama 5-0 in Saturday's other quarter-final earlier in Arizona.
The other semi-final, in New Jersey on Tuesday, will see world champions Argentina face surprise package Canada.
For five-times world champions Brazil it was a disappointing early end to a tournament in which they never truly clicked, and a lot of work remains to be done if Dorival Junior's team are to be in shape to compete for the title in the 2026 World Cup.
In a city better known for boxing than for the beautiful game, it was a bruising contest with little quality play and a tournament high 41 fouls.
A poor quality playing field hardly helped with both teams struggling to produce their best football on an uneven surface.
The first - and best - chance of a game of few opportunities came in the 35th minute when Uruguay striker Darwin Nunez had a clear header in front of goal but mis-timed his effort which flew wide off his shoulder.
Within moments, Brazil created an opening of their own with Raphinha breaking clear, but Uruguay keeper Sergio Rochet stayed tall and made a vital save.
Marcelo Bielsa's Uruguay were as tenacious as always, harrying Brazil in midfield and never afraid to interrupt their flow with a foul.
Brazil resorted too often to long balls forward but with only their 17-year-old talent Endrick, in for the suspended Vinicius Junior, as a central striker they lacked the physical presence to make that approach effective.
The game deteriorated the longer it went on with foul after foul, not deterred by lenient refereeing.
But Uruguay's hopes of wearing Brazil down were dealt a blow when Nandez hacked down Rodrygo with a dangerous slide into his ankle and after a VAR review the defender was sent off.
From then on it was clear that Uruguay were simply trying to make it to full-time and penalties and with no extra-time in Copa America, they were able to achieve their aim.
Tight game
After Federico Valverde scored with the first spot kick, Eder Militao saw his effort saved by the diving Rochet.
When Douglas Luiz hit the post for Brazil, they trailed 3-1 and Jose Gimenez had the chance to clinch the game for Uruguay. His effort was superbly saved by Alisson Becker.
Substitute Gabriel Martinelli scored to keep Brazil alive but midfielder Manuel Ugarte kept his cool to drive home the decisive kick and send the 15-times Copa champions into the last four.
Bielsa praised his team's calmness in the shoot-out and their desire during the 90 minutes.
"I'm more seduced by attacking than defending, but I have to appreciate that in a tight game we created one more situation than our opponents, we defended well and we played 15 minutes with one less player, which at this level is a real factor," he said.
"If you ask me if I'm happy with having created three goal situations in 90 minutes, no, I'm not. But our opponents had two," he said.
"Today we outplayed Brazil in segments of the game and were outplayed in others," added the Argentine.
For Brazil the thoughts turn to the need to ensure they make it to the next World Cup after a poor start to CONMEBOL qualifying.
"We leave the tournament undefeated but not satisfied," said Dorival Junior whose team won once and drew twice in the group stage.
"We didn't play at a high level from a technical point of view, but I don't dismiss any of the games. I think there was commitment, fighting spirit. At no time did the team stop going for the result," he added.
"This process needs patience. We have two years to work before the World Cup. The first thing is to qualify for the World Cup because we are sixth in the (South American qualifiers) and it is a position that makes us uncomfortable," he said.
The tournament's final will be held in Miami on July 14.