Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

2004 CAF Champions League final

2004 CAF Champions League final

FieldValue
title2004 CAF Champions League final
imageAbuja Stadium 1.jpg
captionAbuja Stadium hosted the podium where Enyimba lifted the trophy
event[2004 CAF Champions League](2004-caf-champions-league)
team1Étoile du Sahel
team1associationTUN
team1score3
team2Enyimba
team2associationNGA
team2score3
firstlegFirst leg
team1score12
team2score11
date14 December 2004
stadium1Stade Olympique de Sousse
city1Sousse
referee1Mohamed Benouza (Algeria)
attendance128,000
secondlegSecond Leg
team1score21
team2score22
details2After extra time
Enyimba won 5–3 on penalties
date212 December 2004
stadium2Nigeria National Stadium
city2Abuja
referee2Coffi Codjia (Benin)
attendance260,000
previous[2003](2003-caf-champions-league-final)
next[2005](2005-caf-champions-league-final)

Enyimba won 5–3 on penalties

The 2004 CAF Champions League final was the final of the 2004 CAF Champions League.

It was a football tie held over two legs in December 2004 between Étoile du Sahel of Tunisia, and Enyimba of Nigeria.

Qualified teams

In the following table, finals until 1996 were in the African Cup of Champions Club era, since 1997 were in the CAF Champions League era.

TeamRegionPrevious finals appearances (bold indicates winners)
TUN Étoile du SahelUNAF (North Africa)none
NGA EnyimbaWAFU (West Africa)**[2003](2003-caf-champions-league-final)**

Venues

Stade Olympique de Sousse

Stade Olympique in Sousse, Tunisia hosted the first leg.

Stade olympique de Sousse is a multi-purpose stadium in Sousse, Tunisia. It is used by the football team Étoile du Sahel, and was used for the 2004 African Cup of Nations. The stadium holds 28,000 people. It hosts within it the meetings played by the football team of the city: Étoile sportive du Sahel (ESS).

For many decades, Sousse footballers knew only the clay surfaces and knew the turf surfaces only when the stadium was inaugurated with an initial capacity of 10,000 places. It passes over the years to 15,000 seats and is then expanded again on the occasion of the 1994 African Cup of Nations with 6,000 additional seats to reach a capacity of 21,000 seats; A luminous panel is installed at the same time. The last expansion was carried out in 1999 to bring the capacity of the stadium to 28,000 seats for the 2001 Mediterranean Games, a reorganization of the gallery of honor was carried out, from a capacity of 70 to 217 places.

It hosted 1977 FIFA World Youth Championship, 1994 African Cup of Nations, 2001 Mediterranean Games and 2004 African Cup of Nations.

Abuja National Stadium

National Stadium in Abuja, Nigeria hosted the second leg.

Abuja National Stadium, Abuja is a multipurpose national sports stadium located in Abuja, in the Federal Capital Territory of Nigeria. The stadium serves as a home to the Nigerian national football team, as well as a center for various social, cultural, and religious events. The Federal Government of Nigeria approved the contract for the construction of the National Stadium complex and Games Village on 18 July 2000. The stadium was constructed to host the 8th All Africa Games which took place in October 2003.

In fact, CAF refused to hold the match in the city of Aba, the stronghold of Enyimba, because it did not comply with the CAF standards adopted for the stadiums. Enyimba announced that the African Champions League final will be played in the National Stadium of Lagos, but the Confederation of African Football has announced the transfer of the match from Lagos to the Nigerian capital Abuja.

Road to final

TUN Étoile du SahelRoundNGA Enyimba
OpponentAgg.1st leg
MAR Hassania Agadir2–0[2–0](2004-caf-champions-league) (H)
GHA Hearts of Oak1–1 (5-4 p)[0–1](2004-caf-champions-league) (A)
OpponentResultGroup stage
MWI Bakili Bullets[1–0](2004-caf-champions-league-group-stage) (A)Matchday 1
CIV Africa Sports National[2–0](2004-caf-champions-league-group-stage) (H)Matchday 2
NGA Enyimba[1–0](2004-caf-champions-league-group-stage) (H)Matchday 3
NGA Enyimba[1–1](2004-caf-champions-league-group-stage) (A)Matchday 4
MWI Bakili Bullets[1–1](2004-caf-champions-league-group-stage) (H)Matchday 5
CIV Africa Sports National[2–3](2004-caf-champions-league-group-stage) (A)Matchday 6
Final standings
OpponentAgg.1st leg
SEN Jeanne d'Arc4–2[1–2](2004-caf-champions-league-semifinals) (A)

Format

The final was decided over two legs, with aggregate goals used to determine the winner. If the sides were level on aggregate after the second leg, the away goals rule would have been applied, and if still level, the tie would have proceeded directly to a penalty shootout (no extra time is played).

Matches

First leg

  • Mhadhbi
  • Traoré
{{Football kitpattern_la=pattern_b=_whitestarpattern_ra=pattern_sh=pattern_so=leftarm= ff0000body= ff0000rightarm= ff0000shorts= bbbbbsocks= ff0000Etoile du Sahel}}{{Football kitpattern_la =pattern_b =pattern_ra =pattern_sh =pattern_so =leftarm = 0000FFbody = 0000FFrightarm = 0000FFshorts = 0000FFsocks = 0000FFtitle = Enyimba
TUN Abdelmajid Chetali
NGA Okey Emordi

|}

Second leg

  • Enyeama
  • Ogunbiyi
  • Zouaghi Aliyu
    Ezenwa
    Udeh
    Yusuf Ben Frej Traoré Baya
{{Football kitpattern_la =pattern_b =pattern_ra =pattern_sh =pattern_so =leftarm = 0000FFbody = 0000FFrightarm = 0000FFshorts = 0000FFsocks = 0000FFtitle = Enyimba{{Football kitpattern_la=_redlinespattern_b=_stella1914pattern_ra=_redlinespattern_sh=pattern_so=leftarm=ffffffbody=ffffffrightarm=ffffffshorts= bbbbbsocks= ffffffEtoile du Sahel}}
NGA Okey Emordi
TUN Abdelmajid Chetali

|}

References

  1. [http://www.cafonline.com/userfiles/file/Regulation/champions%20league.pdf Regulations of the CAF Champions League]
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 2004 CAF Champions League final — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report