Daily Dispatch

Doctor remembers that historic day in 1992 PSL yes on Thanda Royal sale

- By MARK GLEESON By KHANYISO TSHWAKU

TODAY‚ as a youthful South African side line up to play Namibia in the Cosafa Castle Cup at Moruleng Stadium‚ it will be 25 years to the day since the country’s first internatio­nal – a 1-0 win over Cameroon in Durban that marked the end of isolation and the start of an exciting chapter for the country’s most popular sport.

It was on July 7 1992 that the first ever Bafana side walked out at King’s Park Rugby Stadium in Durban wearing the country’s new gold white and black stripped strip – but in those days still without a flag and anthem.

It was the release of future South African president Nelson Mandela that precipitat­ed the return of the country to the internatio­nal arena‚ two years before the political structure were overhauled.

Football was among the first sports to be banned because of the country’s apartheid policies but once Mandela had been released‚ and the transforma­tion process got under way‚ the reintegrat­ion of South Africa into the Fifa fold went quickly.

At the 48th Fifa Congress in Zurich‚ South Africa’s membership was restored and within days the country had entered the rigours of internatio­nal competitio­n‚ playing a three-match celebrator­y series against Cameroon.

The “Indomitabl­e Lions” of Cameroon had just two years previously earlier captured the imaginatio­n of football fans worldwide by becoming the first African side to reach the quarterfin­als of the 1990 World Cup in Italy.

The opening game was on a cold and chilly night‚ rare for the tropical climes of Durban in front of a disappoint­ing turnout at the King’s Park Rugby Stadium for a match millions of South African football fans had supposedly been waiting to see for decades.

A strike by journalist­s at the SABC meant there was no television coverage.

The national anthems were played‚ but instead of the apartheid era anthem of the time‚ Die Stem‚ the popular traditiona­l worker’s song Shosholoza blared out of the PA system.

The game was no classic with the South African players trying far too many tricks and the Cameroonia­ns getting visibly irritated and throwing their physical presence around.

The wet surface did not help either.

Chances were few and it was the referee from Botswana‚ Jelas Masole‚ who proved the difference in the end.

He handed South Africa a late penalty‚ as if a welcome back gift from the world footballin­g community‚ which Doctor Khumalo tucked away.

“When the ball hit the back of the net the stadium went wild and I celebrated more of out relief than anything else‚” Khumalo recalled.

“Even after the game‚ it was just another penalty scored and I was relieved that I had not missed!

“But then the next day or the day afterwards someone said to me‚ ‘man‚ what does it feel like to make history’ and it was only then that I really thought about it and the significan­ce of that goal to SA and to me.” — TMG THE Premier Soccer League has approved the sale of Thanda Royal Zulu’s franchise to Durbanbase­d club AmaZulu.

The sale has been in the pipeline since the end of the 2016-17 season after the Richard’s Baybased club earned promotion to the big league after winning the National First Division.

In a statement‚ the PSL said the move was approved with Richard’s Bay now having a team called Richard’s Bay Football Club.

PSL spokesman Lux September said the league’s constituti­on meant the clubs have to inherit the various assets and liabilitie­s of the clubs being brought.

Effectivel­y‚ Thanda Royal Zulu’s players will head down to Durban while AmaZulu’s core will move up the coast.

“Whenever there’s a status being bought by somebody‚ the person who is buying the status must honour the existing contracts and agreements.

“Whoever purchases the club inherits the assets and liabilitie­s‚” said September.

AmaZulu general manager Lunga Sokhela had earlier announced on Twitter that they are back in the big time after a threeyear hiatus.

They were relegated at the end of the 2014-15 season, when their multiple coaching changes seemingly could not buy a win from anywhere.

Craig Rosslee‚ Wilfred Mugeyi and Steve Barker were the coaches that season. — TMG

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES ?? CREATING HISTORY: Former Bafana star Doctor Khumalo takes on Cameroon as South Africa return to internatio­nal football
Picture: GALLO IMAGES CREATING HISTORY: Former Bafana star Doctor Khumalo takes on Cameroon as South Africa return to internatio­nal football

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