Liverpool star Salah, on a
redemption mission with Egypt after injury derailed a miserable World Cup
campaign last year, looked sharp although the hosts needed a 41st-minute goal
by Mahmoud 'Trezeguet' Hassan to get off to a winning start in Group A.
In keeping with April's
spectacular tournament draw under the gaze of the Sphinx, a striking 30-minute
opening ceremony preceded kick-off in Cairo, where a backdrop of pyramids and
statues from Egyptian mythology set the stage for a fireworks display to
illuminate the ground.
The arrival of the Egyptian
players for the warm-up induced a deafening roar from the capacity
75,000-crowd, who predictably reserved the loudest reception for Salah as his
name was read out among the starting line-ups.
With the temperature having
dipped to a more palatable 27 Celsius (81 Fahrenheit) by the start Egypt, the
tournament favourites and 2017 runners-up, immediately looked threatening,
Salah orchestrating much of the attack as he swung in a pair of teasing crosses
-- the second forcing Edmore Sibanda to tip over a looping Marwan Mohsen
header.
Salah was again involved 10
minutes later, intricately exchanging passes on the edge of the Zimbabwe box to
carve out a chance for Abdallah Elsaid, whose shot was palmed away by Sibanda
before Trezeguet lashed over the rebound.
As Zimbabwe struggled to
develop any sort of rhythm with outstanding midfielder Khama Billiat contained,
Salah again had a boisterous, largely red-clad crowd on their feet when he
wriggled past his marker only to shoot over from a difficult angle.
Trezeguet rises to the occasion
A blocked attempt by Zimbabwe
captain Knowledge Musona represented the southern Africans' lone genuine
attempt in the first half as a dominant Egypt eventually broke through just
before half-time.
Zimbabwe's efforts to play out
from defence backfired and the talented Trezeguet, formerly of Anderlecht and
now with Kasimpasa in Turkey, shifted the ball onto his right foot before
sweeping clinically into the far corner.
Trezeguet, who scored three
times in five qualifiers for the event, was quickly sensing another when his
curling 20-yard strike was flicked behind by a sprawling Sibanda.
The Zimbabwe goalkeeper felt
the brunt of a crunching collision with Mohsen on the hour, producing a
courageous stop to deny the forward after a clever first touch created the opportunity.
Sibanda was again tested low to
his right by a Salah effort on his weaker foot, with Egypt 'keeper Mohamed El
Shenawy finally called into action to handle a speculative Billiat drive just
before the second of two mandated heat breaks on 70 minutes.
It appeared Salah's moment was
going to arrive in the final minutes but Sibanda plunged low to his left, with
substitute Amr Warda perhaps offering the forward a better option across the
face of goal.
Egyptian hearts were
momentarily in mouths when an unmarked Evans Rusike rose to meet a cross but he
was unable to keep his header down, allowing Egypt to emerge with an opening
three points in their quest to win the competition for the fourth time as hosts
in five editions.
The Democratic Republic of Congo
and Uganda are the other teams in Group A and they meet Saturday at the same
venue, while Nigeria begin their campaign against newcomers Burundi in
Alexandria.
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