Home Sports Eswatini’s CUCSA dream fades in Botswana
Sports

Eswatini’s CUCSA dream fades in Botswana

Share
Eswatini’s Kwanele Shongwe controls the ball while under pressure from South African player.Eswatini lost 2-0 to South Africa during the men soccer CUCSA Games.(Pic:Sanele Jele)
Share

GABORONE – The curtain falls; the final chapter is written, and for Eswatini, the road to glory has reached an abrupt, sobering terminus.

On a sun-drenched afternoon at the Lekidi Sports Centre, the dream of reaching the CUCSA Games semi-finals withered away yesterday. It was a day that promised everything, yet delivered only the cold, hard reality of elimination. To progress, Eswatini required a Herculean effort; instead, they found themselves suffocated by a clinical South African side, exiting the tournament at the foot of Pool A with a solitary point to their name.

The narrative was stark: South Africa, majestic and unyielding, finished atop the pile with a flawless nine points, having dismantled Zambia, Lesotho and finally, Eswatini. Lesotho, with four points, march on into the final four, leaving Eswatini to reflect on what might have been.

Eswatini entered the fray with a singular, burning ambition—victory was the only currency that mattered. With the tournament’s sharp-shooter, Green Mamba’s Kwanele Shongwe, leading the line, there was a flicker of hope. But football, as it so often does, treated sentiment with utter disdain.

South Africa dictated the tempo from the opening whistle, swarming the Eswatini final third. Goalkeeper Njabulo Malinga was a man possessed, throwing his body into the line of fire time and again to keep the scoreline respectable.

The turning point? A moment of exquisite tension. Sibane Gamedze looked set to shatter the deadlock, unleashing an effort that seemed destined for the bottom corner. But in a display of pure agility, South African custodian Johnson Gennaro clawed it away, a save that felt like a dagger to Eswatini’s collective heart.

The breakthrough arrived in the 32nd minute. Thulani Zandamela, ghosting through the defensive line—much to the chagrin of the Eswatini faithful’ who screamed for offside, found himself in the one-on-one sanctuary. He remained ice-cool, slotting past Malinga to make it 1–0.

Just as the interval beckoned, the second hammer blow landed. Amid a frantic, chaotic scramble in the goalmouth, Samukelo Ngodela poked the ball home to double the advantage at the stroke of half-time. 2–0. A mountain that had suddenly become Everest.

The second period offered a glimmer of defiance. Sitsembiso Dlamini sought to reduce the deficit in the 55th minute, only to be denied by another sprawling save from the imperious Gennaro. Though Eswatini surged forward—with Shongwe dancing through challenges and Banele Bhembe testing the keeper with a stinging volley at the hour mark—the South African ramparts held firm.

For Eswatini, the tournament has been a tale of fine margins and missed opportunities: A narrow 2–1 loss to Lesotho, a pulsating 2–2 stalemate with Zambia, and this final, defining 2–0 defeat to South Africa.

As the final whistle echoed around the arena, the focus shifts. The mantle now passes to the Eswatini athletics team, headlined by the stellar Bongiwe Mahlalela, who takes to the track at the University of Botswana Sports Centre today. The soccer dream is dead, but the Games and the spirit of competition remain.

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Don't Miss

Maloma Colliery calls for calm as wage talks continue

MBABANE - Maloma Colliery Ltd has offered employees a cumulative nine per cent salary increase over two years, but wage negotiations have reached...

Swazipharm blames ministry delays, commits to compliance

LOBAMBA – After being implicated in the delivery of medical drugs that were later recalled, prominent pharmaceutical supplier Swazipharm has reaffirmed its commitment...

DNA plan could swallow E126m of Home Affairs budget

MBABANE – Making DNA testing compulsory before issuing birth certificates could cost taxpayers about E126 million annually, enough to fund free Grade I...

Shembe forgives Zulu King after video fallout

MBABANE – Members of the Nazareth Baptist Church in Eswatini have rallied behind His Holiness Unyazi Lwezulu Shembe after he publicly forgave Zulu...

Eswatini girls shine at Dance World Cup finals

MBABANE - Eswatini’s young ambassadors represented the nation with flawless charm at the ongoing Dance World finals in Ireland. Talent and Motion shared...

Related Articles

Eswatini giants launch COSANA title defence

MBABANE - Eswatini’s reigning regional netball champions Royal Flames launch their COSANA...

SA coaches to influence Eswatini football – ex-Sihlangu manager

MBABANE – Former Eswatini senior men’s national Team Manager Josiah ‘Digger’ Dlamini...

Southern Africa’s best chess minds head to Eswatini

MBABANE - The Trojan Horse International Chess Open is back and it...

E350k, top coach boost for ‘Bull’!

MBABANE – Capital city giants Mbabane Highlanders will receive a major financial...