Rabat – The postponement of the first-leg of the continental final, originally expected around May 15 and moved to May 17 in Pretoria, has sparked a debate over fair play in the CAF Champions League. And Moroccan fans are especially vocal about this change, feeling their teams are being unfairly targeted.
Officially, the date change was reportedly approved after organizational constraints and a request linked to the South African club. But in a match of this magnitude, such a late schedule adjustment raises serious questions. Especially regarding the sporting and logistical impact on the Moroccan side.
A simple calendar change can involve many factors that cause issues. Long-distance travel, reduced recovery time between two finals, difficult weather conditions, and an early kickoff have created a widespread perception of imbalance.
A schedule that undermines sporting fairness
The first concern is timing. Moving the match only 15 days before the original date forces AS FAR to urgently reorganize every aspect of preparation: flights, training cycles, recovery plans, and tactical scheduling.
Traveling from Rabat to Pretoria is already a significant burden, involving long transit hours and demanding logistics.
Another important factor is altitude. Pretoria sits more than 1,300 meters above sea level, which can affect endurance and match intensity for teams not fully acclimatized.
The proposed daytime kickoff, around 2 p.m. in Morocco and 3 p.m. local time, has added to the controversy. High-level African matches are often scheduled in the evening in North Africa to reduce the impact of heat and improve playing conditions. Holding such a decisive fixture during the hottest part of the day is therefore seen by many observers as an additional challenge for the visiting side.
Taken together, these elements create a serious question: was the balance between both legs of this critical match truly protected?
Scandale d’équité en CAFCL : le report du choc AS FAR vs Mamelodi Sundowns au 17 mai impose un enfer logistique aux Marocains.
Entre vols transcontinentaux, repos écourté et coup d’envoi à 14h sous la fournaise de Pretoria, tout semble orchestré pour favoriser le club… pic.twitter.com/Nm6VmK59y3— Hatim el mourabit (@HatimelMourabit) April 30, 2026
Growing perception of favoritism
According to several reports, the postponement followed a request from the South African club and was later validated by organizers. While such decisions may fall within regulations, they fuel recurring debates in African football about equal treatment.
At this stage of the tournament, every detail matters. Teams build detailed recovery schedules, travel plans, and preparation blocks weeks in advance. A sudden change creates instability and can directly affect performance.
From the Moroccan perspective, the decision is widely viewed as beneficial to the host side. AS FAR must now manage a compressed timeline, adapt quickly to local conditions, and deal with more demanding physical preparation between both legs.
In football, when one team appears to benefit from a late decision while the other absorbs the burden, criticism is inevitable.
Governance questions for CAF
This case also revives other concerns regarding governance in continental football. Schedule changes can sometimes be necessary, but transparency is essential when such changes happen late in knockout rounds.
Even without hard evidence, the situation still raises legitimate questions: Why was the request accepted so close to the match date? What objective criteria were used? Was AS FAR fully consulted before the final decision? Was competitive impact properly considered?
The communication was limited, so naturally suspicion grew quickly.
AS FAR’s challenge
The challenge is no longer purely tactical or footballistic for AS FAR. The Moroccan club must now handle long-haul travel, climate adaptation, altitude, recovery management, and psychological pressure before even stepping onto the pitch.
Mentally, such situations add complication and weight. They can either unite a squad or drain it. Players know they are entering an environment where conditions are perceived as tilted against them. That creates additional pressure.
For Mamelodi Sundowns, home advantage already exists naturally: familiar surroundings, local support, climate comfort, and no travel disruption. And those natural advantages may have been reinforced by administrative decisions.
CAF credibility
This semifinal postponement is more than just logistics. It has become a symbol of the wider struggle for credibility, transparency, and fairness in African club football.
Some irregularity has been noticed. And the perception of unequal treatment is real, and in elite competition, perception can be as damaging as fact. Which is not something CAF can’t really afford right now while it’s still struggling to restore its image after the still fresh, chaotic AFCON 2025 final.
AS FAR now faces a powerful opponent in Mamelodi Sundowns and also a difficult competitive context shaped by travel strain, scheduling pressure, and lingering doubts over fairness.
The match in Pretoria will determine more than a winner or a favorite for the return leg, but it also stands the risk of marking another failure by CAF to protect its credibility in its own competition.

