Tag: Sebastien Haller

  • Ivorian hero Haller faces anxious wait ahead of Cup of Nations

    Ivorian hero Haller faces anxious wait ahead of Cup of Nations

    Striker Sebastien Haller, whose goals took Cote d’Ivoire  to the last Africa Cup of Nations title, could miss out on this month’s tournament in Morocco through injury.

    The striker hurt his hamstring playing for Utrecht in the Dutch league at the weekend and has been undergoing treatment since joining up with the Ivorian squad at their training camp in Marbella, Spain this week.

    The Ivorian federation said it was still waiting for test results before making any decision on the 31-year-old’s availability.

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    Haller missed the start of the 2023 finals because of an ankle injury but returned to the side in the knockout stages and scored the winning goal in both the semi-final and final as they won the tournament.

    Cote d’Ivoire  kick off the defence of their title against Mozambique in Marrakech next Wednesday.

  • Côte d’Ivoire’s  Haller  set to miss AFCON

    Côte d’Ivoire’s  Haller  set to miss AFCON

    Côte d’Ivoire could be without a key figure at the upcoming Africa Cup of Nations in Morocco as Sebastien Haller was forced off the field due to injury on duty for Utrecht at the weekend.

    The Elephants squad for their AFCON title defence was announced last Tuesday, with Haller named among the nation’s attacking options for the tournament.

    Haller came off the bench for Utrecht in the club’s Eredivisie clash against NAC Breda on Sunday, taking the field in the 68th  minute. However, his stint on the pitch did not last long as he was replaced by Dani de Wit in the 80th minute due to a reported hamstring injury.

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    Neither the club nor the Ivorian national team has issued any update regarding the player’s condition.

    Haller missed the Elephants’ three group games at the last AFCON on home soil due to an ankle injury, but returned for the knockout stage of the competition. The striker featured in all of his side’s knockout fixtures and netted the winning goal in the final against Nigeria to hand his country its third AFCON title.

    Now in his second season at Utrecht, Haller has notched three goals and one assist in 23 appearances for the Dutch club in all competitions this season.

    His goal-scoring ability and leadership would be a sore loss for the Ivorian as they attempt to retain their continental crown.

  • Sebastien Haller: From cancer to AFCON final

    Sebastien Haller: From cancer to AFCON final

    When Sebastien Haller scored the goal which sent Ivory Coast through to the final of the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations, the striker kept alive the Elephants’ chances of what had seemed an unlikely triumph and wrote another chapter in his own remarkable story.

    Having been on the brink of a group-stage exit and then making dramatic progress to the last four, the West Africans are now one game away from their third continental title.

    “We knew we had the potential to succeed and go far in the competition,” Haller said after netting the winner against DR Congo on Wednesday.

    “The quality on the field is all over. There were lots of things missing from the start of the competition, and we have been trying to find the things that were missing to perform.”

    The Ivorians will now face Nigeria in the final in Abidjan on Sunday (20:00 GMT) but, in some ways, Haller is lucky to be back on the pitch as a professional.

    Just over a year ago Haller scored his first goal for Borussia Dortmund to wild acclaim, as he was buried beneath a sea of yellow-clad team-mates.

    The goal came eight months after he had signed for the German club, but the outpouring of emotion was not just that he had finally scored.

    For in July 2022, just two weeks after joining the Bundesliga side, Haller was diagnosed with testicular cancer.

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    “Of course, you realise it is something really serious that is happening, that a lot of things can change,” Haller told BBC Sport last year.

    “But the urologist helped me not to be scared. He said I could heal well. I took all his words for granted.”

    It was only in early January 2023 that Haller returned to full training, after two surgeries and various rounds of chemotherapy, making his belated debut later that month.

    His goal against Freiburg came, in one of those weird coincidences which the universe has a habit of providing, on World Cancer Day itself.

    Fast forward to this January and injury, albeit much milder, was again preventing the former West Ham and Eintracht Frankfurt forward from featuring for the Ivorians as they hosted the delayed 2023 Nations Cup.

    After damaging his ankle on 19 December, the 29-year-old was not fit enough to make the squad for the Elephants’ first three games.

    But that paved the way for his return as the conquering hero given their calamitous group stage, in which they lost twice, including a heaviest ever home – and Nations Cup finals – defeat when losing 4-0 to Equatorial Guinea.

    Ivory Coast sacked coach Jean-Louis Gasset but then squeezed through into the knockout rounds as a best third-placed side.

    “After the big defeat against Equatorial Guinea, we had no choice,” Haller said.

    “We’ve come back from a long way.

    “There were words, moments, which were not easy for the players, staff and everybody [but] which were necessary.”

    And, after the team had scored just twice in the group stage, the return of Haller was ever more important.

    This, after all, was a man who became the second player after Cristiano Ronaldo to score in all six Champions League group games in 2021-22 for Dutch side Ajax, before eclipsing the Portuguese to became the fastest player to reach 10 Champions League goals in history.

    In the hosts’ epic last-16 clash against defending champions Senegal, Haller was thrown on late in normal time, where his physical presence, hold-up skills and direct play proved crucial.

    It was his perfectly-weighted and probing through ball which found Nicolas Pepe, who was duly upended to allow the Ivorians to score from the spot and take the game into extra time.

    Haller then played his part by netting in the shootout, with the Ivorians prevailing 5-4 to knock out the holders.

    Against Mali in an equally-thrilling quarter-final, Haller was again a substitute – but thrown on at half-time as interim coach Emerse Fae gambled with his team down to 10 men.

    The former France youth international almost settled the match in extra-time when heading a perfect Wilfried Singo cross against the bar, but it was Oumar Diakite who netted the dramatic 122nd-minute winner to set up a semi-final meeting against DR Congo.

    Before his injury, Haller’s international form – three goals in three games – had been far better than at Dortmund this season, where he has failed to score in 11 league games (despite having rebounded well last season with nine goals in 19).

    He seemingly seethed with anger against the Central Africans when wasting a header just before half-time from a glorious delivery from the impressive Singo again.

    But midway through the second period at the Alassane Ouattara Stadium, the tall striker found the net with an unorthodox finish.

    Haller volleyed a deep cross from Max-Alain Gradel into the ground, over DR Congo keeper Lionel Mpasi and just inches under the bar in a ping-pong style finish, to provide a ‘Haller-lujah’ moment for Elephants fans as the tense deadlock in Abidjan was finally broken.

    Cue raucous celebrations and a barely-believable roar once again – this time across an entire country, and not just inside a stadium which had former Ivory Coast legend Didier Drogba in attendance.

    “It’s certain the public push us in every moment. When the public is there and make noise and push us, that makes the difference,” Haller said.

    Born in Paris to a French dad and Ivorian mum, Haller played at every youth level for France – from Under-16 all the way to Under-21 – but in 2020, he pledged his senior international future to his mother’s land.

    And she and her nation of 30 million are happy he did as his strike against the Leopards took the Ivorians to the final on home soil for the first time.

    Now comes a rematch with Nigeria, 24 days on from when the Super Eagles beat Ivory Coast 1-0 in the group stage.

    “It’s a final and you’re there to win it. We’ll analyse everything in order to gain our revenge,” Haller said.

    As unrealistic as it may have been after the group stage, the prospect of Haller helping the Elephants to their first Nations Cup title since 2015 is now very palpable.

    And for the striker himself, just over a year and a half since his cancer diagnosis, his next game could be his most memorable.

  • Ivory Coast hopes Haller returns against Guinea

    Ivory Coast hopes Haller returns against Guinea

    Ivory Coast are hoping to have striker Sebastien Haller back from injury for their last Africa Cup of Nations group game next week after their coach Jean-Louis Gasset admitted they were outmuscled against Nigeria on Thursday.

    The host nation lost 1-0 in their second Group A game and are under pressure to get a result when they conclude the opening phase of the tournament against Equatorial Guinea on Monday.

    The Ivorians are third in the group standings with three points, one behind both Equatorial Guinea and Nigeria, and will be looking for a win to make sure of their progress to the last 16.

    Gasset said he hopes Haller, who missed the opening two games with an ankle injury, will be back to help add bite to his side.

    “The medical team has been working day and night to get him ready. His ankle is healed but it’s the physical work that remains to get him fit. I sincerely hope Sebastien will be able to participate in the third match with us.”

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    The tall Borussia Dortmund striker will provide a focal point for the Ivorian attacks, which were easily stymied by a five-man Nigerian defence on Thursday in a disappointing spectacle for the home fans.

    “It was a very physical match. Nigeria chose to defend very low with a five-man defence. They slowed us down by refusing to play. We had to be patient, we had to be defensive, we had to try to get past them on the wing,” said Gasset, France’s former assistant coach.

    “We didn’t feel like we could compete physically. We had opportunities when we got the ball into their box, but it was the big Nigerians who inevitably cleared the ball. In the end it was a small detail that made the difference and gave them a penalty.”

    A kick in the calf of Nigerian forward Victor Osimhen from 20-year-old Ivorian defender Ousmane Diomande led to a penalty after a lengthy VAR review and William Troost-Ekong converted to hand Nigeria a first win on Ivorian soil.

    “We have a young team without much experience, though plenty in terms of quality. I didn’t have the impression the Nigerian team was superior to us but there is work to be done. This is the start of the competition. We won the first game, we lost the second. We will do our best to win the third,” Gasset said.

    Egypt in 2006 were the last host nation to win the Cup of Nations.