CRITIQUE: The Battle for the Towels

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By Chris Osa Nehikhare

…the towels—innocent, hardworking towels—were being treated like contraband.

AFCON has always promised drama, passion, controversy—and occasionally, comedy. But few could have predicted that one of the most talked-about scenes at the just-concluded tournament would involve not a red card, a missed penalty, or a VAR decision, but… towels.

Yes, towels.

In a moment that belonged more to theatres than elite football, Moroccan officials were caught on camera energetically dragging towels away from an opponent’s and stealing those placed by goal post. It was a sight that left fans across Africa and beyond rubbing their eyes in disbelief.

For a brief moment, AFCON felt less like the continent’s premier football competition and more like a neighbourhood laundry dispute.

One almost expected a referee to blow the whistle and award a free kick for “illegal possession of cotton.” The goalkeepers, bewildered, stood there as if asking the universal football question: “Is this really happening?”

Meanwhile, the towels—innocent, hardworking towels—were being treated like contraband.
Social media, of course, had a field day. Memes flew faster than counter-attacks. Analysts debated tactics, pundits debated refereeing, but fans debated towels. Was it gamesmanship? Psychological warfare? Or simply another reminder that AFCON is football served raw, unfiltered, and full of character?

Yet beyond the comedy lay a deeper truth. This brand of intimidation is not new. Nigeria knows it too well. Time and again, African teams have faced hostile antics designed to unsettle, distract, and intimidate. The Super Eagles endured their fair share of such moment during the semi final match against same Morrocco.

But this time, Senegal would not bow.

Unmoved by theatrics and unshaken by towel-snatching mind games, the Teranga Lions stood firm. They played football, not drama. They answered distraction with discipline, pressure with poise, and provocation with purpose.

In the end, victory belonged to Senegal—and rightly so.

Congratulations to the Teranga Lions for a well-deserved triumph, earned through resilience, focus, and an unyielding refusal to be bullied out of their game.

And as the final whistle blew and reality set in, it became clear: perhaps we all misunderstood the urgency around those towels. They were never meant to dry hands or wipe sweat.
They were needed to dry tears.

Once again, AFCON reminded us why it remains the most compelling football theatre in the world—where passion overflows, drama is guaranteed, and sometimes, even towels tell a story

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