Calgary Herald

ZIMBABWE’S WARRIORS ARE MIGHTY IN SPIRIT

‘Deep sense of respect,’ for opponent, says Canadian head coach Herdman

- CHRISTIE BLATCHFORD cblatchfor­d@postmedia.com

About a month ago, Canadian head coach John Herdman showed his women’s soccer players a story about their counterpar­ts in Zimbabwe, the impoverish­ed African country headed by the cruel strongman Robert Mugabe.

Herdman had been monitoring the media about the team for a while and wanted the Canadians to understand what the Zimbabwean women had faced on the road to Rio — no funding; the need to have a full-time job; the forfeited games, big games, because there was no money to travel; even injured players paying $100 for an MRI.

Really, Herdman wanted the Canadians to get in a visceral way how lucky they are, if only via the happy accident of birth.

He wanted them to have a “deep sense of respect for (their) opponents,” as he said Friday. “That’s adversity and that makes people strong.”

The Mighty Warriors — every national football team in Zimbabwe is known as the Warriors, but with no way to feminize the name, the players went with “Mighty” — are the first soccer team of either gender from “Zim,” as natives call their country, to qualify for the Olympics. They very nearly didn’t. They had to pass on a thirdround Olympic qualifying match against Ivory Coast because the soccer federation had no money to send them. Ivory Coast was duly awarded three points, but when the return match was scheduled in Zim, Ivory Coast also ran out of dough and couldn’t go.

The game was reschedule­d, but this time Ivory Coast withdrew and Zimbabwe got a spot in the final round, where they won on away goals against Cameroon.

As well, virtually the entire Zim coaching staff was abruptly fired in September last year and new head coach Shadreck Mlauzi, a high school physical education teacher by profession, was brought in.

He and team captain Felistas Muzongondi made an appearance at the mandatory day-before news conference at Corinthian­s Arena.

The Warriors drew powerhouse Germany in their opening match and were pounded 6-1, but they stole the affections of the crowd, who chanted “Zim-bab-we” throughout. “We shall forever be indebted to the Brazilian people for that,” Mlauzi said in his soft voice and with his impeccable manners. “We hope for the same show of support tomorrow.”

While most of the players work full time for the military, police or correction­al service and play for their teams — the Blue Swallows Queens (the air force), the Black Rhinos (the army) and the Flaming Lily Queens (the correction­al service) — Muzon- gondi works as a clerk for a sugar manufactur­er.

“I’m not a footballer always,” she said. “I give myself time for the job and training.” Even Mlauzi, who said “at the end of the day I’m being paid, yes,” isn’t fully on contract with the Zim associatio­n.

Newspapers back home noted a wealthy local businessma­n, a self-appointed benefactor for the game, recently gave Mlauzi a car — and reported that while he was delirious about the gesture, he didn’t have a driver’s licence.

As he said, “Zimbabwe football at the moment is an emerging ( game) and women’s football is in its infancy. Everyone has jobs as full-time profession­als, so we are an amateur group of players, I would say.”

Zimbabwe is rated 93rd in the world, Canada 10th, but as Herdman said, “It’s an Olympics, we know pretty well things can ( go) out of control ... big upsets can happen ... Zimbabwe can make history for their country and that will drive them.”

For all the genius of sports scientists who back up the Canadians and most wealthy Western nations, figuring out when 34-year-old legs may give up and 16-year-old ones may stumble, “You still gotta go with instinct,” Herdman said. “Sometimes, who wants it more wins.”

He really believes, even in 2016, that still happens and he said he sometimes feels he’s trapped in the science of modern sport. “You have to trust the art of coaching ... Will before skill and you know those players who can find it for you.”

Wherever Canadians get to the podium, he said, it’s usually when “will outdoes talent.”

But these Canadians on Saturday face a team forged in hardship, who enjoy no luxuries and few advantages, but who are a proud group — and as Mlauzi said, “an ambitious group.”

Nothing may speak to that better than some of their first names, the faith-grounded and aspiration­al names their optimistic parents gave them — there’s Emmaculate, Talent and Rejoice.

The Mighty Warriors, Mlauzi said, didn’t even enjoy the applause at home they deserved for their remarkable qualifying run; that went mostly uncelebrat­ed.

“The support wasn’t really as great as we would expect,” he said. Then, with a lyrical Zimbabwean nod to a higher power, he added, “But other than that, we thank the Almighty that we are here.

“We are the manifestat­ion of God’s grace, really.”

We shall forever be indebted to the Brazilian people for (their cheers). We hope for the same show of support tomorrow. S HAD REC KM LA UZI, head coach, Zimbabwe’ s women’ s soccer team

 ?? ALEXANDRE SCHNEIDER/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Zimbabwe’s women’s soccer team was pounded by Germany in their opening match, but won over the crowd.
ALEXANDRE SCHNEIDER/ GETTY IMAGES Zimbabwe’s women’s soccer team was pounded by Germany in their opening match, but won over the crowd.
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