Selfies, goals and cheers at South Africa’s grannies World Cup
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US' New England Breakers and South Africa's Vakegula Vagekula walk into the pitch during the Grannies International Football Tournament.
PHOTO: AFP
TZANEEN – Mbele Nonhlanhla laced up her silver boots as her coach shouted encouragement to creaky knees, stiff backs and laboured breathing in a dressing room in South Africa’s far north.
At 63, wearing jersey No. 10 and sporting brown-dyed hair, the grandmother of seven was far from your typical footballer when she stepped onto the field for her first international tournament.
“I feel like a superstar,” Nonhlanhla grinned, revealing a missing tooth. “They call me the goal machine.”
Her team, Vuka Soweto, hails from the renowned township of Soweto, outside Johannesburg.
They had joined more than a dozen others from across Africa and beyond to compete last week at the Grannies International Football Tournament in the northern province of Limpopo.
The four-day “Grannies World Cup” was held in a stadium with mountain views, and the 30-minute games were played in two halves at a slow but purposeful pace, between teams from as far as the United States, France and Togo.
“It is all about active ageing. Whether we win, lose or what, it is all about coming here and staying fit,” said 62-year-old South African Devika Ramesar, a mother of two and grandmother of five.
Until this week, the Liverpool fan had never stepped onto a football pitch.
Meanwhile, Kenyan striker Edna Cheruiyot had only two months to learn the “long list” of football rules before April 4, when she scored her only goal.
She took selfies to remember her first-ever trip abroad and send to her grandchildren.
“I feel nimble. This is the lightest I have been since my first child in 1987,” Cheruiyot said, adjusting the blue headwrap covering her greying hair.
At 52, she is a youngster within her team, whose oldest player – Elizabeth Talaa – is 87.
The idea for the tournament arose in 2007 as a way to improve the health of local women, said founder Rebecca Ntsanwisi, 57, who is fondly called Mama Beka.
It came out of her sense of personal challenge following a cancer diagnosis that once bound her to a wheelchair.
“The older women need to come together and enjoy. We are neglected,” she said, adding that she hopes to host the next tournament in Kenya in 2027.
In South Africa alone, almost 40 per cent of children live in households headed by their grandparents, according to government statistics. That is mainly due to poverty, cultural traditions and urban migration.
But grandmothers should not be saddled with the responsibility of raising their grandchildren, Ntsanwisi said.
“This is our time to enjoy and relax,” she said. “I will die knowing that I did something.”
Chris Matson, 67, took the advice to heart and travelled from the United States to “enjoy every second of the tournament”.
“I did not play when I was little, so to do it now is wonderful,” said the bubbly goalkeeper for the American New England Breakers team and winner of the Golden Glove gong.
The team doctors, however, earned their keep. The aches and pains of the elderly players needed constant checking, South African team medic Diana Mawila said.
Some members of her Vakhegula-Vakhegula team had to be monitored for high blood pressure before every game.
But captain Thelma Ngobeni insisted: “We are fit! It is not about winning or losing. All that matters is that we showed up, had fun and did our best.”
Nonhlanhla’s goal was more ambitious. A dream of making it big in football was within reach, she said.
“It’s never too late to achieve your childhood dreams. I don’t see anything stopping me,” she added. AFP


