'TP Mazembe players tired of watching other teams dominate Africa'
TP Mazembe coach Lamine N’Diaye says the players are tired of seeing of other clubs dominate the CAF Champions League.
The Mazembe coach has praised the leaders and players for their ambition after not competing in the tournament last three seasons."We have leaders who have a lot of ambition. Going three years without a Champions League final is an anomaly for a club like Mazembe," N'Diaye said in an interview with CAF.
"The players were tired of seeing other clubs dominate the continent. They rolled up their sleeves and the results are now there. "We need to be at our best. We have great respect for Al Ahly who are the most successful team on the continent," he added.
Caf Champions League Lamine Ndiaye News
South Africa Latest News, South Africa Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Converge Africa 2024 (Formerly ECOM Africa) is Africa’s leading Digital Commerce eventAfrican tech news, innovation, geek culture, games and more
Read more »
Africa: USAID Launches the Africa Trade Desk through Prosper AfricaPress Release - Today, Deputy Administrator Isobel Coleman announced the launch of the Africa Trade Desk, a signature trade platform from Prosper Africa that links large U.S. food retailers to African producers.
Read more »
Mazembe Boss: We're Tired Of Seeing Others Dominate CAFCLMazembe Boss: We're Tired Of Seeing Others Dominate CAFCL
Read more »
Right of reply: Minister of human settlements Mmamoloko Kubayi responds to Africa Check’s commentary on housing numbersSouth Africa's minister of human settlements has responded to an article written by Africa Check.
Read more »
Africa: Somali PM Receives China's Envoy to the Horn of AfricaHamza Abdi Barre, Somalia's prime minister, met with Ambassador Xue Bing, China's special envoy to the Horn of Africa in Mogadishu.
Read more »
South Africa: Will South Africa's Voters Survive the Disinformation Deluge?The biweekly report by the Centre for Analytics and Behavioural Change (CABC) sheds light on what they describe as concerning trends in online activity leading up to South Africa's general elections.
Read more »