The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Homeless World Cup preps on course

- Collin Matiza Sports Editor

THE selection of Team Zimbabwe for this year’s Homeless World Cup soccer tournament in Mexico City, Mexico, in November will be spread to Harare’s high-density suburbs of Mbare and Hopley as preparatio­ns for this annual global showpiece gathers momentum.

In the past years, the selection of Zimbabwe’s team for the Homeless World Cup was confined to Hatcliffe, a high-density suburb in the northern part of Harare but Petros Chatiza, the programme co-ordinator of the Young Achievemen­t Sports for Developmen­t who pick and run Team Zimbabwe for this event, has indicated that they have come up with a new selection criteria for their squad.

“Although this year’s Homeless World Cup will be held in November, which is six months away, we have decided to pick our team early so that we do all the paperwork, including getting visas to Mexico, much earlier.

“And as you know, in the past years we used to pick our players for the Homeless World Cup from Harare’s high-density suburb of Hatcliffe but for this year’s selection we are looking at selecting underprivi­leged players from Hatcliffe, Epworth, Mbare (Matererini Flats area) and Hopley.

“In Mbare we will have a bias towards the players who stay in the Matererini Flats while in Epworth we will look for some of the players who took part in last year’s Mwalimu Kumbula soccer tournament (which is sponsored by one of that area’s most illustriou­s sons Musekiwa Kumbula).

“We are also looking at the logistics of doing a selection of those (street kids) living in the CBD area of Harare. We are looking for players who are 18 years old and above. We are looking at sending two teams of males and females or a mixed team but I think we would want a male and a female team. Each team will be made up of eight players.

“And this means that for this year’s Homeless World Cup tournament, we are likely to have a team of 16 players and four officials representi­ng Zimbabwe and for our budget we need something slightly more than $30 000 for the airfares to Mexico,” Chatiza said.

The Homeless World Cup is an inspiratio­nal week-long street football tournament that brings together more than 500 players representi­ng 50-plus countries from around the globe, all of which have faced homelessne­ss and social marginalis­ation.

The tournament attracts more than 80 000 visitors each year with millions more following the action online. Mexico City was recently officially named as the host city for the 2018 Homeless World Cup and the Mexican capital will welcome more than 500 players from over 50 countries for a week-long festival of football. The inspiratio­nal tournament will return to the venue of the successful 2012 event, the iconic Zocalo, right in the heart of Mexico City.

This year’s Homeless World Cup tournament will run from November 8-15 with more than 400 fast-paced games expected to take place across three purpose-built pitches and Zimbabwe, who have been a regular feature at this event since 2006, will once again be part of this football jamboree in Mexico City in six months’ time.

Last year’s tournament was staged in Oslo, Norway, from August 29 to September 5 and Zimbabwe were among the 50 countries that attended what was one of the biggest and most ambitious Homeless World Cup tournament­s.

Over 500 players took part in the Oslo event and more are expected for this year’s tournament which will be held in partnershi­p with Mexico’s mobile telephone giants Telmex.

“We are thrilled to announce Mexico City as the host for the 2018 Homeless World Cup, and delighted to be partnering with Fundación Telmex once again,” said Ryan Mackie, Chief Executive of the Homeless World Cup Foundation, on their official website last month. “We believe Mexico 2018 will be a world-class, life-changing event that both our participan­ts and spectators will remember forever.”

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