The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

From Isaac Mpofu to the Chevrons

. . . a year of mixed fortunes

- Sports Reporters

FROM long-distance runner Isaac Mpofu being the first Zimbabwean athlete to punch his ticket to the Paris 2024 Summer Olympics to the stuttering Chevrons, it has been a mixed bag of performanc­es by the country’s sports teams this year.

Mpofu underlined his bid to make a mark at the Olympics when he clocked a new national record time of two hours, six minutes and 48 seconds at the Valencia Marathon in Spain.

The Olympic qualifying standard time is two hours, eight minutes and 10 seconds. His achievemen­t cemented the marathon runners’ dominance in local athletics over their track and field counterpar­ts. On the other hand, football, the country’s flagship sport, ended an 18-month FIFA-enforced hiatus from the internatio­nal game.

This paved the way for the Warriors, Mighty Warriors and even the schools’ teams to return to action with some statement shows.

FIFA lifted the suspension on Zimbabwe on July 11 by appointing the Normalisat­ion Committee, led by Lincoln Mutasa, to take charge of ZIFA.

Zimbabwe then played their first competitiv­e match against Rwanda in a World Cup qualifier that ended goalless at Huye Stadium in Butare on November 15.

Four days later, 2022 Castle Soccer Star of the Year Walter Musona became the first player, post-suspension, to score for the Warriors in a competitiv­e match, when he struck in the 1-1 draw against Nigeria at the same venue.

The Mighty Warriors also made a return to the internatio­nal stage with a dance at the 2023 COSAFA Women’s Championsh­ip in South Africa in October. They finished fourth after a 2-0 loss to Mozambique in the bronze medal match, while Malawi were crowned champions for the first time.

History for Ngezi

On the domestic front, history was made in the Castle Lager Premier Soccer League as Mhondoro miners Ngezi Platinum Stars won their maiden championsh­ip, becoming the first side from Mashonalan­d West province to achieve such a feat, which also comes with a debut place in the CAF Champions League.

Giants Dynamos ended a nine-year trophy drought with a 2-0 triumph over Ngezi in the Chibuku Super Cup.

Victory also meant Dynamos secured a ticket to the 2024 CAF Confederat­ion Cup, which will mark exactly a decade since their last appearance in a continenta­l inter-club competitio­n.

The lifting of the FIFA suspension also brought some joy to young footballer­s, who, after missing the inaugural edition in Malawi last year, were given the opportunit­y to host the CAF African Schools Football Championsh­ip-COSAFA Qualifiers in Harare.

Zimbabwe finished third in the tournament won by South Africa.

Blemish

Sadly, the game continued to lose some of its finest servants.

Former Warriors player and coach Rahman Gumbo and ex-Zimbabwe goalkeeper George Chigova died within days of each other in November.

In the same month, yesteryear great Andrew “Mai Maria” Kadengu, who dazzled for Zimbabwe Saints, also passed away and was buried in Chinhoyi.

The football fraternity was plunged into mourning again following the death of legendary Dynamos winger and coach David George. He died at his home in Glen Norah on December 23 and was buried at Zororo Memorial Park on Boxing Day.

Cricket

For the cricket family, 2023 started on a bleak note, as if to portend what would follow in the year.

Seven days into the new year, the sport lost ex-Lady Chevrons internatio­nal Sinikiwe Mpofu.

Mpofu, who later became the senior women’s national team assistant coach, died less than a month after the demise of her husband, Shepherd Makunura, who was the Chevrons fielding and assistant coach. As if to give Mpofu and her husband a befitting send-off, the Chevrons registered their first win of the year, when they cruised to a fivewicket victory over Ireland on January 12. They went on to win the three T20 Internatio­nal series 2-1.

Having spent close to two years without playing the longer version of the sport, the Chevrons marked a return to red-ball cricket with two Test matches against West Indies at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo in February. They drew the first game, before the tourists edged Zimbabwe by four runs in the second Test.

Despite all the promise they showed early into the year, the Chevrons somehow lost the plot and failed to maximise on home advantage when tasked to host the ODI World Cup Qualifier.

◆ Read more on: www.sundaymail. co.zw

 ?? The late Rahman Gumbo ??
The late Rahman Gumbo
 ?? ?? Isaac Mpofu
Isaac Mpofu
 ?? ?? PROUD . . . The Lady Chevrons squad that secured
MOMENT passage to the T20 World Qualifiers line up before their match in Uganda
PROUD . . . The Lady Chevrons squad that secured MOMENT passage to the T20 World Qualifiers line up before their match in Uganda

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