MBABANE – The fine line between sporting genius and public humiliation has never been thinner than it was at the Prince Moulay Abdellah Stadium last night.
In a moment that will be etched into Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) folklore for all the wrong reasons, Morocco’s Brahim Díaz saw his reputation as the tournament’s standout star eclipsed by a single, ill-fated flick of the boot.
By attempting a Panenka in the 114th minute of a deadlocked final against Senegal, Díaz did more than just misplace a penalty; he joined an elite, if cursed, brotherhood of superstars who have discovered that the world’s most audacious trick shot often carries a sting in its tail.
This type of kick is named after the Czech midfielder Antonín Panenka, who immortalised the technique during the most high-stakes moment imaginable. Before 1976, if you were taking a penalty, you generally chose power or placement to a corner. In the final of the 1976 European Championship, Czechoslovakia and West Germany were tied in the first-ever major tournament penalty shootout. Antonín Panenka stepped up for the winning kick. Instead of a traditional strike, he used a long run-up to trick the legendary Sepp Maier into diving, then gently chipped the ball into the centre of the net.
This past Sunday, the Real Madrid maestro, who had been the tournament’s top scorer, stood over the ball after an unprecedented 20-minute delay that saw the Senegalese team briefly walk off the pitch in protest. The psychological weight was immense. Yet, while the 66 000-strong home crowd expected a thunderbolt to end Morocco’s 50-year trophy drought, Díaz opted for the chip. Édouard Mendy, a man who famously stood his ground against a Sergio Agüero Panenka years prior, refused to blink. He caught the ball with the nonchalance of a Sunday morning warm-up.
In that frozen moment, Díaz joined Lionel Messi—who clipped the crossbar with the same technique in the 2024 Copa América—and the aforementioned Agüero in the ‘Panenka Hall of Shame’. Like his predecessors, Díaz learned that when the deception fails, the hero’s cape is swiftly replaced by a cloak of ridicule.
Senegal’s subsequent extra-time winner via Pape Gueye felt like a cruel inevitability.
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