Senegal fires head coach Pape Thiaw after World Cup exit, exposing a football federation in crisis

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The Senegal Football Federation dismissed head coach Pape Thiaw on July 12 after the national team’s round-of-32 exit at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, falling to Belgium. It’s a decision that looks straightforward on the surface, but the dysfunction underneath tells a far more interesting story, one that extends well beyond the pitch.

Thiaw took charge on December 13, 2024, replacing the long-tenured Aliou Cissé. He actually won the 2026 Africa Cup of Nations title in January. Then he got fired six months later.

A tenure defined by chaos, not just results

During his time as head coach, Thiaw went five months without receiving his salary. His contract was irregularly signed just hours before a crucial World Cup qualifying match against Norway. An incident during the AFCON final resulted in a five-match ban from the Confederation of African Football and a $100,000 fine. Fan petitions calling for Thiaw’s removal had been circulating well before the World Cup exit gave the federation a clean excuse to act.

The fan token gap African football can’t ignore

Belgium, the team that knocked Senegal out, has an official fan token ($BELG). Spain has its own token (SNFT). Senegal has none of this. No official fan token. No crypto sponsorship deals. No blockchain-based engagement infrastructure of any kind.

For a federation that apparently can’t pay its head coach for five months straight, the absence of these revenue streams isn’t a minor oversight. It’s a structural disadvantage.

Africa’s untapped sports crypto market

The risk is that federations like Senegal’s are too disorganized to execute. A $100,000 CAF fine and months of unpaid coaching salaries suggest an institution that struggles with basics, let alone blockchain integration.

Whoever replaces Thiaw will inherit an AFCON trophy and a federation that, by most accounts, needs far more than a new coach.

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