The Family Meeting ended the only way it ever can: late, loud, emotional, and with one relative walking out clutching the prize while the rest replay every moment on the drive home.
After a month in Morocco that felt less like a tournament and more like a continent-wide gathering, Senegal stood up from the table and took the 2025 Africa Cup of Nations trophy with them.
The final at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium was peak Family Meeting energy.
Hosts Morocco had set the table beautifully – full houses, colour in the streets, rhythm in the stands – and for 90 minutes they matched Senegal stride for stride. But AFCON never leaves on time.

Extra time arrived with that familiar feeling that something dramatic was still unpacking itself, and Pape Gueye delivered the moment that silenced the room: a thunderous left-footed drive from the edge of the box, hit with the conviction of someone who knew exactly why he’d been invited.
Senegal 1, Morocco 0, and the trophy had its destination.
That goal only came after one of the most surreal endings to regulation time AFCON has served up. A VAR review.
A penalty awarded to Morocco. Senegal threatening to abandon the meeting altogether.
Then Brahim Diaz – the tournament’s standout individual, five goals deep and brimming with swagger – stepping up and attempting a Panenka.
It floated. It failed. And suddenly the mood shifted. At every Family Meeting there’s that one moment everyone will argue about forever. This was it.
For Senegal, this was confirmation, not coincidence. Calm, controlled and relentlessly competitive, the 2021 champions returned to the table with receipts.
They navigated tricky matchups, managed moments better than anyone else, and found a way to win even when the noise got deafening.
Their second AFCON title cements a golden generation that now knows how to finish the job, not just promise it.
Morocco, meanwhile, were magnificent hosts and worthy finalists, even if the wait for a second continental crown – their only triumph still dating back to 1976 – stretches into a sixth decade.
They gave the Family Meeting warmth, organization and flair, and in Diaz they showcased a star who owned the spotlight until football reminded everyone of its cruel sense of humour.

Across the tournament, chairs were pulled out and pushed back in. Giants stumbled. Dark horses spoke up.
Every nation that qualified earned a seat at Africa’s biggest table, and as each one fell away, the same question echoed from Cairo to Cape Town: who’s taking this home?
The answer took extra time, VAR drama and nerves of steel to settle.
AFCON 2025 was The Family Meeting in full flow – chaotic, passionate, hilarious, heartbreaking and unforgettable.
And as SuperSport brought every story, every twist and every laugh across DStv and GOtv, one truth stood tall above the noise: in African football, family is everything… but only one family member gets to leave with the silverware. This time, it was Senegal.

