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Inside Ivory Coast's bonkers route to Afcon final after mid-tournament sacking

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The team
The team's refusal to die has earned them a brilliant nickname from their supporters

IVORY COAST'S route to Africa Cup of Nations glory has been one of the most chaotic in the history of football.

The host nation were left on the brink of elimination following a 4-0 drubbing at the hands of Equatorial Guinea in the final game of their group stage.

Ivory Coast are the new kings of Africa after beating Nigeria eiqxiqekiqdprw
Ivory Coast are the new kings of Africa after beating NigeriaCredit: AFP
Ivory Coast's Afcon story is one of the most remarkable in football
Ivory Coast's Afcon story is one of the most remarkable in footballCredit: Reuters
Cancer-beater Sebastien Haller celebrates after scoring the winner over Nigeria
Cancer-beater Sebastien Haller celebrates after scoring the winner over NigeriaCredit: AP
The side have come a long way since the one that were drubbed 4-0 by Equatorial Guinea
The side have come a long way since the one that were drubbed 4-0 by Equatorial GuineaCredit: AFP

But tonight they are celebrating after cancer beater Sebastien Haller secured a remarkable comeback from 1-0 down to beat Nigeria 2-1 and be crowned the new kings of Africa.

They had limped through the group stage to that point, managing a 2-0 victory in their opener against the unfancied Guinea Bissau before losing 1-0 to Nigeria in their second match - a team that were hardly pulling up trees at the time.

But following the 4-0 calamity against Equatorial Guinea, the Elephants became one of the only sides in history to benefit from a mid-tournament new manager bounce.

Cameroon battle to find players as another group fail Samuel Eto'o age testsCameroon battle to find players as another group fail Samuel Eto'o age tests

They removed incumbent manager Jean-Louis Gasset and replaced him with his assistant, Emerse Fae as interim head coach.

And Fae was able to immediately benefit from Afcon's recent expansion from a 16-team tournament to a 24 team event, seeing his side qualify for the round of 16 as one of the best performing third place group stage teams.

Fae's first game in charge against Senegal saw Franck Kessie net a late 86th minute penalty to make it 1-1 and keep the Elephants in the tournament.

They had trailed 1-0 for much of the game before Kessie's strike, and then managed to hold on to win on penalties against one of the pre-tournament favourites.

The side's late-late show was repeated again in their quarter-final victory over Mali, when Brighton's Simon Adingra struck a 90th minute equaliser to make it 1-1.

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Jean-Louis Gasset was sacked following the Ivory Coast's 4-0 loss to Equatorial Guinea
Jean-Louis Gasset was sacked following the Ivory Coast's 4-0 loss to Equatorial GuineaCredit: AFP
He was replaced by his assistant, Emerse Fae
He was replaced by his assistant, Emerse FaeCredit: AFP

That was enough to force extra-time and an Oumar Diakite volley in the 122nd minute saw them win the game and advance to the semi-final.

Those last-gasp wins have seen fans of the Ivory Coast refer to their team as "zombies" given the team's ability to jump back to life when appearing to be dead.

The "zombie" team were able to reach the final in a more straight forward manner on Wednesday, beating DR Congo 1-0 courtesy of a Haller strike.

Chelsea legend Didier Drogba led the wild celebrations after his nation booked their spot in the last-two at the Olympic Stadium of Ebimpé in Abidjan.

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Reflecting on his side's unlikely route to the final, Fae said: "We are happy, we're really moved. It's like a dream, when you go back two weeks to the defeat here against Equatorial Guinea.

“It was hard then to imagine that we might qualify for the final of our own Afcon.”

Kessie, who's late goal in the round of 16 epitomises his side's never-say-die attitude, also reflected on his side's run after they reached the final, saying: "As long as you still have a five or 10 per cent chance you need to keep believing, because that is what makes football beautiful.

“After the Morocco result [which saw the Ivory Coast qualify for the knockouts as a third place team] we knew we had qualified and that changed everything. It gave us the strength we needed, it boosted us. We knew we couldn't do worse than in the first round.

“We need to keep going like this because you can't go all the way to the final only to then give up.”

Drogba was cheering on from the stands again on Sunday as Kessie levelled the scores on the hour mark.

And then the magical moment came with just nine minutes to go when Haller pounced for the winner to cap one of football's most remarkable ever stories.

Kessie's penalty against Senegal brought The Elephants back to life
Kessie's penalty against Senegal brought The Elephants back to lifeCredit: AP

Cosmo Teare

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