Hosni Mubarak isn't a man accustomed to defeat. The Egyptian president, after all, has been in charge for more than 30 years, outflanking regional and global rivals with consummate ease. Even Egypt's electoral process offers him scant chance of coming second: He romped during the 2005 elections with almost 90 percent of the vote.
Yet as Mubarak sat in his residence watching the World Cup playoff last November between Egypt and Algeria -- which was being played in Sudan -- that unusual sinking feeling would have come across him as Antar Yahia's thunderbolt sent the Desert Foxes to their first World Cup since 1986 and the Pharaohs, back-to-back African champions no less, home...
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