The Standard (Zimbabwe)

Nashe: From childhood in Zim to Scotland rugby team

- —BBC —Supersport

Edinburgh — Panashe Muzambe chokes back the tears at the memory of sitting in a hotel lobby the day before her Scotland debut. She stumbles at recalling the surprise, the overwhelmi­ng emotion, but most of all; she vividly recites the phone call to her father, letting him know his little girl from Zimbabwe was set to represent her adopted nation at rugby.

“I’ll enjoy it for both of us,” Muzambe says. The 24-year-old’s story is a powerful tale of courage, determinat­ion and love. Courage to live without her mother in Africa for five years before an emotional reunion at Gatwick Airport ahead of their new life in Scotland.

Determinat­ion to do all she can to make her family in both countries proud, and love for a game she didn’t play until she was a teenager.

Muzambe started on the bench in the Women’s Six Nations opener away to England yesterday earning her seventh cap.

“I was born and raised in Zimbabwe because my mother moved here. First I was brought up by my aunties and uncles while my dad was working, so a lot of my extended family played a massive role in my upbringing, and that’s very common for us. We joke about how family for the black communitie­s is everyone, so anyone's auntie or uncle,” she said.

“Then at 12 me, my father and brother got the opportunit­y to come across to Scotland, and we had a nice family reunion at Gatwick airport. I can remember it vividly, it was March and it was a little bit cold. I say a little bit I mean very cold!

“It was very challengin­g, but we needed to embrace that because mum was doing the best for us. It meant I could go to school, it meant we had food on the table, it meant a lot of things.

“Then it was literally: come to Scotland and get enrolled into school, and I think that really stressed the whole importance of education for my parents. It was like, we're not here to play around. We didn’t get a tour of Scotland, we didn't get a tour of Edinburgh.

“When I was at Napier University they were starting a new rugby team and I literally rocked up at where they were doing a try session with a pair of trainers. But from that day I was hooked. We played a lot of tennis in Zimbabwe. So the girls would play tennis throughout the term and, for me, it was Serena who stood out because not only did she look like me, you know, but she was so powerful. And I just wanted to emulate the smallest amount of strength that she showed on the court.

“But my rugby coach at Napier, who was playing for Scotland, spoke to me and was like ‘Nashe, I think you could do something’. Because I didn’t know rugby that much, I didn’t actually know if I was good at all. I just felt like I was there having a kickabout every Wednesday. It was extra motivation to take a second look at myself.

Muzambe recalls “a mob” coming to watch her in South Africa.

Eventually, a call to be part of the Scotland fold followed for Muzambe, an invitation coming to be the 24th/25th player in Spain.

“Being a reserve was a big deal. One of the first things I did was write ‘Six Nations’ in my diary and that I’m coming for you,” Muzambe said.

“From January, we had Six Nations games after that and I travelled to France as well. And I think that’s when it was like ‘Okay, this could be happening this year’.”

After being part of a small number of squads, Muzambe was called into the matchday pool for the final match of the 2019 Women’s Six Nations against England in London.

“I arrived at the hotel and one of my good friends congratula­ted me. I thought ‘ What is she talking about?’ Nobody really says congratula­tions for coming in as a reserve and she was like ‘Nashe, you’re on the bench’,” she said.

“I had to excuse myself because I genuinely did not know how to deal with the emotions and

I went and sat in the lobby of the hotel. I called my dad. He said: ‘ That’s amazing, I’m so proud,’ and just hearing my dad saying that was important because our parents wouldn’t really show us those emotions. My dad couldn’t make it, but I said I’d enjoy the moment for the both of us.

“It was pretty nervy during the game. Ten minutes to go, then 80 gone. I was thinking it wasn't going to happen, then I got called up to get subbed on and then told to go sit back down. You can’t write this stuff! I eventually remember crossing the whitewash and just looking up to the heavens and just thanking God... then I went in for a scrum!”

Muzambe’s second cap was just as special but in a very different way. Part of the women’s squad on their first ever tour, she travelled to South Africa, allowing members of her family from her homeland to see her in action.

“My family here couldn’t make it to South Africa. However, I had the best reunion with some of my extended family. My uncle came to the first game on his own. I introduced him to a lot of the girls,” Muzambe said.

“So, we played another game and he brought the whole village with him. I think he rounded up every single person who lived in Cape Town. After the game I was mobbed by people and little kids.”

Muzambe recognises the significan­ce of her role as a black sportswoma­n in Scotland. She insists it's not about her or her achievemen­ts, but providing hope for what comes next.

“I’ve been quite fortunate that within my sporting career I’ve not been subjected to any direct racism,” she said.

“Sometimes there is the subtle kind of racism that takes place. But I remember coming from training once and just going off to a local supermarke­t. All of a sudden a security guy is following me through every single aisle. You’re just thinking: ‘ What is it that that gives you the audacity to think that I’m not going to be able to pay for my milk and bread?”

“In terms of rugby, this is bigger than me. I'm just going to try to get a few more caps, because the longer I can stay in the game, the more visible I am to not just black and brown kids around the country, but any kid who has felt like they are marginalis­ed within society.

“I may have been the first black woman to play for Scotland, but it’s my job to make sure I’m not the last.”

LIVERPOOL — Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp said he did not understand England boss Gareth Southgate’s decision to drop Trent Alexander-Arnold from the squad for their World Cup qualifiers and backed the defender to respond positively to the setback.

Alexander-Arnold was left out of England’s 26-man squad for last month’s 2022 World Cup qualifying matches against San Marino, Albania and Poland, with Southgate suggesting the 22-year-old's form had cost him his spot.

“If Alexander-Arnold is not in the squad then England must have an extremely good squad,” Klopp said. “I was surprised he didn’t get the call-up. I am a manager, I make decisions every day about team selections.

“I respect Gareth makes his own decisions but I didn't understand it because Alexander-Arnold was, in the last two seasons, the stand out right-back in world football — that is the truth and at an unbelievab­le young age.”

Alexander-Arnold has been one of the players criticised for Liverpool’s disastrous Premier League title defence this season, but Klopp believes the full-back has returned to form after a tough start to the campaign that included contractin­g Covid-19.

“It took him a while to get into the season, but from the moment he was in, he has been one of our most consistent players,” Klopp said, adding that AlexanderA­rnold could benefit from the England snub.

“He was not with the national team, so he had time to train. He trained at an extremely high level and showed a reaction when there is no need to do so.

“He was really ‘in’ the sessions so that was good. He is very ambitious, I am sure he wants to be in the England squad and he will try everything to be there again.”

Liverpool, seventh in the standings, visited ninthplace­d Arsenal last night.

 ??  ?? Panashe Muzambe
Panashe Muzambe

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