On Tuesday, the Confederation of African Football will host a swanky gala in Egypt, the highlight of which will be the announcement of their choice for African Footballer of the Year.
A needlessly bloated initial long list has now been whittled down to a very manageable three, all of whom have a strong enough claim under any consideration.
Although it is widely expected that Senegal forward Sadio Mane will be crowned for the first time, Riyad Mahrez and Mohamed Salah have shared the last three gongs, and come into this year's edition on the back of pretty strong years in their own right.
Salah of course shares almost all of the highs that have so elevated Mane; Liverpool's sixth Champions League title owed much to the combined offensive firepower of that duo plus Roberto Firmino, even as, for the first time, the concept of a sibling rivalry entered into the conversation.
Both moved quickly to quell the insinuations, and if the well was in any way poisoned, it has not been to the detriment of the Reds, who have continued to accrue wins by the week.
So far ahead are they in the title race at the turn of the year that it is now considered only a matter of time before the championship they came within one point of winning last season is handed over to them.
It will no doubt have greater significance than their somewhat symbolic wins in the Uefa Super Cup and the Fifa Club World Cup, but it is the winning culture that those lesser trophies have helped foster that is the greater legacy.
The sheer weight of the silverware does not hurt though, especially when, like Salah and Mane, there is a prestigious award in the offing.
That brings to the fore the key debate that conditions this award: quantity or quality, and in this case of the latter, what is the relevant context?
Mahrez's claim to the prize, a historic and frankly unexpected triumph at the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations, naturally has quite a bit of heft. It is, after all, Caf's flagship competition. That ought to count for something.
Some might even say that, given the continent's long history of deferring to European club football (a perception that, for political reasons, is expedient for the Ahmad Ahmad presidency to not only shun, but actively shed), it should count for everything.
There is a point there, even though, as with most things, politics only serves to besmirch the magic of a first Afcon win in 39 years. On its own merits, it was momentous enough.
Algeria were clearly the best team in the competition from start to end, and Mahrez assumed a central role, scoring three times – including that famous semi-final winner with the very last kick against Nigeria – and sacrificing his individual flair to a degree in service of the collective.
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The question then is whether Caf should implicitly place a greater on the Afcon and achievements (and performances) within it.
It is a parameter that would heavily favour Mahrez, but would immediately eliminate Salah from the conversation: Egypt were disappointing as the host nation, suffering a flat elimination in the Round of 16 at the hands of South Africa.
Mane though would still score pretty highly by that measure, seeing as it was his Senegal that eventually lost the final to Mahrez and Algeria.
He also scored thrice in the competition, and may well have had more but for his wastefulness from the penalty spot – he missed twice, raising some interesting questions about just how much, by contrast, the Teranga Lions seemed entirely subjugated to his ego.
Ultimately, it seems a much too narrow parameter to fit through, even leaving aside the fact that no four-week competition, however influential, should be able to upstage an entire year's work. At club level, Mahrez has been a part of Manchester City's relentless winning machine, but only latterly has his role been significantly expanded.
There is, of course, the broader question of why any of this even matters. There is a touch of the anachronistic to these individual awards, and even those not cynical enough to shrug and label it exactly what it appears to be – glitzy massage therapy for the egos of super-wealthy athletes – can at least admit this seems pretty hollow.
The search for deeper meaning can only be resolved by latching on to a comforting pattern: the end of the 2010s has seen the return of the larger-than-life African superstar forward that dominated African football in noughties.
For Didier Drogba, Samuel Eto'o and Emmanuel Adebayor, read Salah, Mane and Mahrez: all influential attackers playing at the absolute highest level of football in Europe, while being the veritable emblems of their country's hopes.
masaceos
714
Look at mahrez,salah and mane’s performance in the EPL. It also counting,Algeria won’t the trophy where mahrez was playing his performance was quite good but mane deserves this year award
Gunners4ever❤
557
My African POTY ranking: Mane. Salah. Mahrez. In that order☝️ Mane- Liverpool's best player after Van dijk last season and scored many crucial goals for Liverpool in 2019. Honours: UCL winner, EPL runner up, EPL golden boot, AFCON runner up, CWC winner, UEFA super cup winner. Salah- Won his 2nd golden boot in 2 years in the EPL and although he was not as good as he was in his first season at Liverpool, he still played a key role in Liverpool's dominance this year. Honours: UCL winner, UEFA super cup winner, CWC winner, CWC golden ball (best player) award, EPL golden boot, EPL runner up. Mahrez- Was mainly a bench player for city but played well whenever he was called upon and played his part in city's treble winning season. Was instrumental for Algeria in his national team's successful AFCON tournament as well. Honours: EPL winner, FA cup winner, Carabao cup winner, AFCON winner, Community shield winner.
MehdiGR_7
452
This man is so underrated, he did very well in the afcon and he leaded Algeria to win it and also he did well each time he played with city last season, and now he is doing very good with city i think he deserves to win it the second time. And if not Mane also did good and he also deserves it
SH221B
384
For me its Mane. Salah and Mahrez played really well, but Mane was exceptional. Mane helped Liverpool to win champions league and He is the key factor in Liverpool's current success.Also he helped Senegal to reach the final of African Nation cup. Always humble on and off the field. Yes, Mane desserves it.
raynknight
362
Riyad Mahrez - won most Trophies but individualism isn't backing him Mo SaLah - scored Goals but lacked consistency and impact Mane - had stats , had impact and had consistency + he won UCL Tooo Its an absolute No Brainer 👊
mikcinru
292
mane and mahrez did well for their club and country wins cup and scoring goals but mahrez will win it his country Algeria is African champion and mahrez is tournament MVP' remember we're talking about Africa best not winning the tournament will count against mane ,mahrez will be the winner tanks
abcianis
273
Mahrez absolutely no doubt that he deserves it more than the other two , he was the leader for the Algerian national team to win their so awaited African Cup on Egypt Soil this itself should be enough to grant him the prize
Gunners4ever❤
233
Salah was the best in 2017 & 2018 but No one deserves this year's prize more than Sadio Mane. A Humble person and a Tremendous Player
Dundinho
194
Mahrez just won trophies with city by spending more time on the bench and sorrounded by star city players. His efforts were not effective in city's trophies not mane is the driving force of Liverpool he is there key player number 10 scored in supercup final created a penalty in champions league final, led Liverpool to an incredible 38 matches unbeaten run. EPL golden boot winner. Mane no doubt this tlme
MohammedRaheem
120
Sadio Mane deserves it. Played AFCON final. Mahrez won Afcon but he wasnt as influential for Algeria as Mane was for Senegal. Mahrez didnt even start all the Afcon games for Algeria, dame situation at club level with all due respect
sufyrumu
113
For me,I see this award going to an amazing player on the field of play and an amazing person with a big heart,He is non-other than SADIO MANE.
Wawabirstu
107
To be honest Sadio Máne really deserves this award regardless of the likes of Mohammed Salah and Riyadh Mahrez.I'm saying this because Sadio Máne has been really outstanding in 2019 and also his achievements as well, -UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE -UEFA SUPER CUP -FIFA CLUB WORLD CUP -JOINT PL GOLDEN BOOT and also finishing fourth in Balon d'or list,PL runner up and Afcon runner up!
mahommednyaude
24
i don't care who will win it between mane and salah , but mane will win it as he deserves it this year i only know that the winner will be from liverpool 😂😂