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FIFA clears 2 recruits for Congo to play in African qualifying playoffs

FIFA clears 2 recruits for Congo to play in African qualifying playoffs
FIFA approves Standard Liege goalkeeper Matthieu Epolo (pictured) and Celtic forward Michel-Ange Balikwisha to change national eligibility to Congo from Belgium ahead of 2026 World Cup qualifying playoffs for Africa starting Thursday. (X/@leopard243)
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FIFA clears 2 recruits for Congo to play in African qualifying playoffs

FIFA clears 2 recruits for Congo to play in African qualifying playoffs
  • Both players have Congolese family ties and were born in Belgium
  • FIFA said Epolo’s move was approved Wednesday and Balikwisha was cleared Tuesday

ZURICH: FIFA approved two soccer players to change national eligibility to Congo from Belgium ahead of 2026 World Cup qualifying playoffs for Africa starting Thursday.
Celtic forward Michel-Ange Balikwisha and Standard Liege goalkeeper Matthieu Epolo are now available to play for Congo against Cameroon in a playoffs semifinal.
Both players have Congolese family ties and were born in Belgium. They represented Belgium at youth and Under-21 level though not the senior national team, which let FIFA approve the changes.
FIFA said Epolo’s move was approved Wednesday and Balikwisha was cleared Tuesday.
The winner of Congo vs. Cameroon will advance to a playoff final Sunday against the winner of Nigeria vs. Gabon on Thursday. The entire playoff bracket is being played in Rabat, Morocco.
The African playoff winner advances to the six-team intercontinental playoffs in March that will send two teams to the World Cup being co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.
Congo qualified for the World Cup just once, when as Zaire the team played at the 1974 edition in West Germany.


Another stage in the evolution of women’s cricket

Another stage in the evolution of women’s cricket
Updated 13 November 2025

Another stage in the evolution of women’s cricket

Another stage in the evolution of women’s cricket
  • The development of women’s cricket has gathered significant pace in the last three years

In the afterglow of the 2025 Women’s ODI World Cup, the International Cricket Council has announced that it is keen to build on the success of the tournament. It was hosted by India and Sri Lanka and was won for the first time by the former, who beat South Africa in the final. In itself that pairing may come to be seen as the moment when the domination by Australia and England was broken. This would be unfair on New Zealand who won the 2000 edition, beating Australia by four runs. However, the view exists that, for India, with its playing resources underpinned by strong finances and fierce support, the victory heralds the start of a sustained era of success.

The anguished faces of the defeated Australians and their limp body language at the end of their semifinal against India spoke of a recognition that a serious new challenger to their dominance had emerged. Australia has won seven of the 13 Women’s ODI World Cups, England four, including the first one in 1973. The semifinal loss to India was Australia’s first defeat in 16 ODI World Cup matches. It was made worse for them in that India had chased down a record run chase of 339 with nine deliveries remaining.

It is sobering to recall that the early years of the event were beset by funding difficulties, with gaps of up to six years occurring between tournaments. It was not until 2005 that a regular four-year interval was established. The number of participating teams has varied between four in 1978 and 11 in 1997. In 2000 the number was fixed at eight, but the ICC decided, as far back as International Women’s Day 2021, that the number would be expanded to 10 for the 2029 edition. This will increase the number of matches from 31 to 48. The 2026 Women’s T20 World Cup, hosted by England and Wales, will feature 12 teams, an increase of two from 2024.

Attendances at matches have also increased. The crowd for the India-Australia semifinal at the DY Patil Stadium, Navi Mumbai, was 34,651, while the ICC reported that “nearly 300,000 fans watched matches in stadiums, breaking the record for tournament attendance for any women’s cricket event.” Viewership growth was also reported with “new records being set for on-screen audiences across the world and nearly 500 million viewers in India.”

Global interest in cricket will be boosted by its inclusion in the 2028 Olympic Games in Los Angeles, where 28 matches have been scheduled across both the men’s and women’s competitions. The ICC has announced that the six teams in each competition will comprise the top-ranked side from each of the five regions — Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania, and the Americas. The sixth team will be identified through a qualifier. On current rankings, South Africa, India, England, Australia and either the US or the West Indies will qualify for both competitions.

Before the 2028 Olympics, cricket for both men and women will feature in multi-sport games at the Asian Games in 2026 in Aichi-Nagoya, Japan; and the African Games in Cairo, Egypt, and the Pan American Games in Lima, Peru, both in 2027. More immediately, the Southeast Asian Games will be held in Thailand from Dec 9-20, 2025. Six countries will contest T10 and T20 cricket — Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Myanmar.

These are all significant steps forward for cricket’s presence on the global sporting landscape, and are not just for men.

My impression is that the development of women’s cricket has gathered significant pace in the last three years. One catalyst for this has been the introduction of franchise cricket for women. Although this happened first in Australia in 2015, it was followed by England/Wales in 2021, the West Indies in 2022 and India in 2023. In England and Wales, the double heading of men’s and women’s matches on the same day at international stadiums brought enhanced opportunities to watch women’s cricket. A second catalyst has been the increase in ICC tournaments. Each year there is now a major women’s event, increasing visibility.

A third potential catalyst is the effects of the Indian women’s team’s World Cup win. All over India it is possible to imagine that the win has stirred ambitions in young girls, fundamentally changing what they believe they can achieve in life. It is also possible to visualize that their families and communities also believe in the possibility. The sight of women cricketers being celebrated and feted with the same intensity, level of analysis and adoration as male cricketers represents a significant transformation in cricket’s contemporary evolution.

None of these developments would be possible without the fourth catalyst of funding. Pay for professional women cricketers is still lower than their male counterparts, but moves toward greater parity are in place. Indian players and support staff received a handsome bonus after their World Cup win. The England and Wales Cricket Board has put in place a restructuring of the women’s game, part of which is that minimum starting salaries are now equal across men’s and women’s professional domestic cricket.

In March 2025 The Professional Cricketers’ Association said the increasing disparity between the top salaries of men’s and women’s players in The Hundred “cannot be allowed to continue.” This was after it became apparent that the gap in pay between the top men’s and women’s players widened from £75,000 to £135,000 for 2025. The PCA report also noted that the average salary of a female player had increased from £8,000 in 2021 to £29,100 for 2025.

The sale of equity in The Hundred has brought additional funding. In 2026 the overall salary pot in The Hundred Men’s Competition will increase by 45 percent, rising to £2.05 million per team. The overall salary pot in The Hundred Women’s Competition will increase 100 percent for the 2026 season, rising to £880,000 per team, while the base price salaries for the lowest-paid player increase to £15,000, up by 50 percent.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India made a landmark decision in October 2022 to introduce equal match fees for men and women cricketers at international level. After the World Cup victory, a former women’s team captain, Mithali Raj, spoke of her time, not so long ago, when there were either low or no match fees, few facilities, no sponsorship, and travel was by public transport. How times have changed.

Women’s cricket has been symbolized by decades of struggle and resilience. It has now bloomed into being more than sport, becoming a blueprint for how visibility, investment, facilities and opportunity can transform not just a game, but the lives of talented individuals and their supporters.