The Citizen (Gauteng)

Our netball authoritie­s must not drop the ball

- @wesbotton Wesley Bo on

Next year, South African netball will have a golden opportunit­y to elevate the status of the sport when Cape Town hosts the quadrennia­l World Cup.

It’s probably the only chance the sport is going to have for a very long time to showcase itself at the highest level, and it cannot be wasted.

We are now one year away from the tournament, however, and considerin­g how important it is that the event is a success, there is some cause for alarm.

First off, for the sport to capitalise on the event, it is going to be absolutely crucial for the Proteas to perform. At the very least, they need to reach the playoffs if they want to lift the status of the game on home soil and rope in longterm support from local sports fans.

Their performanc­e at the recent Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham was terribly disappoint­ing. While they picked up a few wins against lower-tier opposition, they were thumped by Jamaica and Australia and were handed a shocking defeat by Uganda in the playoffs.

In terms of getting the country behind them ahead of the World Cup, that’s just not the way to do it, and they are going to have to find a way to lift their game before the tournament gets underway.

Secondly, and equally importantl­y, Netball SA needs to understand just how important it is that this event is an all-round success.

We cannot have any of the issues and decisions which we saw again this week at the Spar National Netball Championsh­ips, with late changes being made to fixtures and bizarre quota systems being enforced that punished a team which is completely transforme­d.

Of course, the local organising committee will have the assistance of the Internatio­nal Netball Federation, which will no doubt play a role in ensuring everything is in place for a successful tournament, but we still need SA officials to raise their game.

In the long run, if the sport wants to become fully profession­al and receive the support it wants, there can be no more amateur approaches to anything.

Netball has never received the respect it deserves. It’s a great sport – as exciting to watch as any other – and it does more to get young girls on the sports field than just about all other codes combined.

They have to to get it right. No weird decision-making, no half measures in organisati­on and no space for the Proteas to bomb out against anyone.

Netball has one chance here. They’d better take it with both hands and run with it.

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