By Ian Hughes BBC Sport
Burkina Faso reached their first Africa Cup of Nations final by beating Ghana on penalties in a dramatic and controversial semi-final in Nelspruit.
The Burkinabe were denied spot-kicks
in normal time and in extra-time, when they also had a goal ruled out, and saw
Jonathan Pitroipa harshly sent off.
Burkina Faso Team |
Mubarak Wakaso put Ghana ahead in
normal time with a debatable spot-kick, before Aristide Bance equalised.
Burkina Faso won the penalty
shoot-out 3-2 to set up a meeting with Nigeria.
That Pitroipa - outstanding
throughout the tournament - will not be a part of that showpiece match in
Johannesburg will take some of the joy out of the victors' celebrations.
Referee Slim Jedidi showed the
winger a second yellow card for diving in extra-time when it looked liked a
clear foul on the player, having earlier twice turned down plausible penalty
claims from the Burkinabe.
Justice appeared to have been done
when Emmanuel Agyemang Badu missed Ghana's fifth spot-kick in the shoot-out and
Burkina Faso players began celebrating their historic achievement.
One
step beyond
Burkina Faso's pervious best
performance was reaching the semi-finals in 1998 when they hosted the
tournament
Having played on the dreadful
Mbombela Stadium pitch in all four of their previous games, it was perhaps no
surprise that the Burkinabe settled more quickly than Ghana.
They should have won a penalty for
what looked a blatant push by John Boye on Pitroipa. But the referee was not
impressed, and then ruled that Mady Panandetiguiri had fouled Christian Atsu as
the pair rose to battle to get their head on a free-kick into the box and
awarded Ghana a penalty, which Wakaso converted.
It was a turnaround in fortune for
the Black Stars, who had lost defender John Pantsil to injury within the first
10 minutes.
Skipper Asamoah Gyan then had a
chance to put Ghana firmly in control when he beat the offside trap to bear
down on Daouda Diakite but the Burkinabe keeper closed down the angle well to
make a save.
But Burkina Faso, who have been
resilient throughout the tournament, responded well and Prejuce Nakoulma had a
good chance to hit back when he latched on to a long ball over the top, but
blazed over the bar.
The end of the half belonged to
Ghana and they could have had another penalty in the opening period when Paul
Koulibaly tangled with Badu.
And the Black Stars missed another
good chance to double their lead in open play when substitute Solomon Asante -
on for Pantsil - poked over after great work by Kwadwo Asamoah.
The Burkinabe looked in determined
mood after the break and soon saw Bance's header brilliantly clawed out of the
top corner by Dauda.
Five minutes later, Gyan had an
excellent chance to give Ghana some breathing space but struck the foot of the
right post from 10 yards out.
Ref
justice
A Twitter campaign has already begun
to get Cas to rescind Jonathan Pitroipa's red card
And the Black Stars skipper was soon
made to pay for that miss when Bance, one of three changes to the Burkinabe
starting line-up, put his side level, side-footing home after Badu had been
robbed in midfield.
Gyan had a chance to atone for his
miss when he rose to meet a right-wing cross but his header went narrowly wide.
To add injury to his disappointment, Gyan was then kicked by Paul Koulibaly
while on the floor, with the Burkinabe man lucky to be booked rather than sent
off.
With neither side able to make the
breakthrough, the game went into extra-time and there were chances galore for
both teams.
Ghana substitute Harrison Afful
brought a good save from Diakite before Burkina Faso's Bakary Kone headed over
from close range and then Bance beat two men and cut inside but lashed his shot
over the bar.
Soon after came perhaps the most
controversial call of the game. Nakoulma beat Asamoah to a throughball and
poked the ball past Fatau Dauda but the referee ruled the goal out for a foul
that was difficult to detect.
In the second period of extra-time
the Burkinabe came close again when Bance's fierce drives somehow cleared off
the line by Afful.
As extra-time ran down, Pitroipa was
dismissed when he should have won a penalty, but more penalties were to come as
the game came down to a shoot-out.
Pan Pierre Koulibaly was the only
Burkina Faso player to miss as they ran out winners, with Badu the unfortunate
man to miss for Ghana, who now contest the third-place play-off with Mali.
Burkina Faso coach Paul Put:
"The refereeing decisions were
scandalous.
"We've lost Jonathan Pitroipa
now for the final. He's very important to us, but we are 23 players and it's up
to the technical staff to devise tactics to beat Nigeria without him and [the
injured] Alain Traore."
Burkina Faso captain Charles Kabore:
"The referee is human, all
humans make mistakes, but he happened to make too many tonight.
"But we're not going to dwell
on that. We've qualified."
Ghana captain Asamoah Gyan:
"We came here to win [but] the
better side won on penalties.
"We're all really sad now.
That's normal. We're down, but we have to psyche ourselves up now for the third
place play-off with Mali."
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