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Friday Fun Thread for January 16, 2026

Be advised: this thread is not for serious in-depth discussion of weighty topics (we have a link for that), this thread is not for anything Culture War related. This thread is for Fun. You got jokes? Share 'em. You got silly questions? Ask 'em.

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Anybody watch the AFCON final? What a game. Spent 90 minutes as the sort of high-energy 0-0 football Americans love to hate, lots of missed chances, very physical, literal blood on the pitch. Then, in the last minutes of the game, well, I'll give some background, first - I was in Morocco for a couple games, and a common sentiment among fans of black African teams was that "the Arabs" have bribed the refs to favour North African teams, particularly Egypt and the hosts Morocco. Any bad call was met with mutterings about "the Arabs" and their nefarious plans. To be fair, Morocco are just really a very good team, causing much better teams a hell of a lot of trouble at the most recent World Cup.

So first, second minute of extra time, Senegal score a quality goal from a corner, which is ruled out by the ref a second later. A Senegal player and a Morocco player were running at each other in the box, both with their arms up (Morocco player raised his first), the Moroccan falls over, a very soft foul. Ref had been easy-going up until this point. The ball goes up the other end, probably the last play of extra time, comes into the Senegal box, and as the players are jockeying to jump for it a Senegal player puts his hand on a Moroccan's shoulder and the guy goes down like Bambi on ice. A clear dive to me, no attempt to stay on his feet, but just enough of a tug that the ref could call a penalty kick (for reference, about 75% of penalty kicks are scored. This is likely a death sentence for Senegal).

However, as they're lining up, a "security incident" is announced in the stands. No other information given on the TV feed, but the players are ordered off the pitch for safety. My experience was that the Moroccan organizers went in very hard on security (while fucking up every other aspect of the fan experience), understandable given the region and the threat of terrorism. Looking today, it seemed to be Senegal fans fighting with the cops. There's all kinds of pushing and shoving on the pitch, too, ref is giving yellow cards to Senegal left and right, but they storm off into the dressing room. A Senegal player posts on snapchat "Peace, we're getting robbed." Eventually they're told to come back, but either nobody's told the Senegalese team or they don't want to come out. Sadio Mane, Senegal legend, two-time and soon to be three-time African Player of the Year runs off the pitch, into the dressing room, and gathers his boys to face defeat with dignity.

The teams line up around the goal. Morocco gives the kick to Brahim Diaz, the tournament's top scorer. The hopes and pride of his nation ride on him, you can see it in his eyes and hear it in the crowd. Diaz steps up, Diaz kicks, and - well, let me tell you about the Panenka. Named for Czech player Antonin Panenka, it's a type of penalty kick where you fake out the goalkeeper so he dives to one side, and then bobble a light chipped ball right through the centre of the goal. It's a power move, the ultimate humiliation for a keeper if you pull it off. Diaz Pankenas. The Senegalese keeper, Mane, stands stock still. The ball sails gently into his hands. . The stadium roars, Sengal goes mad, you can see the light leave poor Diaz's eyes. Commentator on African TV shouts "This is not the time to play Panenka!"

Extra time (in knockout football tournaments, a draw often leads to an extra 30 minutes to break the tie). Just two minutes in, Mane gets the ball, Senegal plays it to Papa Gueye running up the left wing. Gueye runs with it to the edge of the box, one Moroccan player behind him and one positioning to block in front, but in a moment of space on the edge of the box he unleashes a gorgeous, gorgeous shot right into the top corner of the net. Rig that, "the Arabs." Madness erupts all round, including in our family living room. Senegal hold the lead, close out the match, victory. This is the magic of AFCON: it's not just that anything can happen. Anything will happen. If you have any interest in sports, internecine African rivalries, get bit by the "soccer" bug over this year's World Cup, or just like to see bizarre things happen on TV, I recommend catching AFCON summer 2027. Peace, we didn't get robbed.

Did you mean to use spoiler tags? Might wanna fix that.

I think spoiler tags are just broken with multiple paragraphs.

Now the biggest spoilers are visible while the rest is not.