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DELTA CHALLENGES PSL CLUBS

Eddie Chikamhi-Zimpapers Sports Hub

DOMESTIC football’s all-weather friends Delta Beverages have challenged Premiership teams to rally their fans and fill up stadiums across the country for this year’s Chibuku Super Cup tournament.

Speaking at the draw yesterday, Delta Beverages Marketing Director Irimayi Muzorewa said clubs needed to be deliberate and come up with initiatives that prioritise fan engagement.

“It’s one thing to put an investment in the game, but it’s also another thing to invest in the fans, as well as the communities, and we certainly hope that every team that will be participating in this year’s competition is going to rally their fans to make sure that we fill up the stadium as much as possible,” said Muzorewa.

“We are excited to continue on this incredible journey in partnership with the PSL which has certainly grown stronger over the years. We are humbled by the trust, collaboration and shared vision that we have built together. This tournament transcends beyond football.

“It’s about community, pride and creating moments. The kind of moments that unite our fans while bringing families and friends together over a weekend or weekday to cheer on their teams . . .

“We certainly look forward to thrilling matches, fixtures, as well as the outstanding talent that will be on display, and of course, the strong spirit of sportsmanship.”

The tournament is returning with an unchanged purse of $375 000 with the winners set to walk away with $75 000 and a ticket to represent Zimbabwe in the CAF Confederation Cup.

Muzorewa said they look forward to highly competitive matches following yesterday’s draw which saw defending champions Dynamos having to take the longer route this year as they start the title defence from the preliminary round owing to their poor performance in the league.

According, to the competition rules the bottom four teams — Yadah, Triangle, Dynamos and Kwekwe United — start from the preliminary round on August 6-7.

DeMbare, winners of the past two editions, will face the ignominy of beginning their quest for a third straight Chibuku Super Cup title with a date against fellow league strugglers Yadah at Ngoni while Triangle take on Kwekwe United at Mandava.

Glamour Boys chairman Moses Maunganidze said DeMbare will look to put behind them their current struggles in the league marathon, where they sit second from the bottom, and hope to retain the title.

“Typical of a draw, you may never be paired with who you want to play, but we are ready to play Yadah come August 6 in Norton. If we go past Yadah, obviously, as you are aware, we are going to play Simba Bhora.

“So, we are ready for the two draws in terms of the preliminary round game and then the first-round game. We are hopeful as the cup holders twice in a row.

“We look forward to doing very well. It’s a very well-structured tournament and playing from the preliminary round actually gives us better platform to prepare ourselves even as we move to play Simba Bhora in the first round.

“So, we are ready, we are ready for that,” said Maunganidze.

The winners from the preliminary round will join the top 14 teams in the first round.

The first-round draws were also conducted yesterday with the top eight seeded teams set to start at home.

Venues for Harare teams will be confirmed as Rufaro might not be available at the time of the first-round matches, set for August 9-10, because of the Heroes Day celebrations.

Former Cup Kings CAPS United will begin their campaign at MWOS while Highlanders will travel to Harare for a date against Herentals.

Scottland will be the home team when they begin their quest against GreenFuel while FC Platinum will receive Manica Diamonds in another interesting duel.

Premier Soccer League acting chief executive officer Rodwell Thabe said they are looking forward to improved competition.

“This tournament remains a platform where all our 18 PSL clubs have an equal opportunity to compete for cup glory and the honour of representing the nation at the Cup Confederation Cup.

“Last season was really captivating and this year we challenge our clubs to raise the bar even higher. Score more goals, fill the stadiums and create memories that will last a lifetime.

“We are confident that as usual, it has become the norm with this tournament. This year’s Chibuku Super Cup will deliver love, excitement and entertaining football that our supporters have come to expect from this Cup.

“As the Premier Soccer League, we are proud of the strides that we continue to make in elevating the profile and professionalism of our games,” said Thabe.

He also urged clubs to step up administrative structures.

“And we urge the clubs to endeavour to comply with the FIFA Club Licencing Regulations, which will remain a foundation for the success of our football.

“The Chibuku Super Cup, like I’ve said, is always full of surprises and has become a true showcase of unpredictability and we remain committed to fulfilling the basic requirements to make our football matches a pleasure to experience by focusing on three core aspects — the safety of our fans and stakeholders, the security and the service that we give to them,” said Thabe.

Chibuku Super Cup draw:

Preliminary Round:

Aug 6: Yadah v Dynamos (Ngoni)

Aug 7: Triangle v Kwekwe (Mandava)

First Round: Simba Bhora v Yadah/Dynamos (Wadzanayi), MWOS v CAPS Utd (Ngoni), Scottland v GreenFuel (TBA), TelOne v Bikita Minerals (Ascot), FC Platinum v Manica Diamonds (Mandava), Ngezi Platinum Stars v Triangle /Kwekwe Utd (Baobab), ZPC Kariba v Chicken Inn (Nyamhunga), Herentals v Highlanders (TBA)

2026 Nations Cup will be a ‘game-changer’ for Zimbabwe rugby

Zimbabwe’s World Cup qualification hero Ian Prior believes that the World Rugby Nations Cup will be a ‘game-changer’ for Zimbabwean rugby, as the men’s national team prepares to make its return to the Rugby World Cup stage after a 36-year absence in Australia in 2027. Zimbabwe, whose last World Cup appearance was back in 1991, secured their place at the expanded 24-team tournament in Australia after successfully defending their Africa Cup title with a thrilling 30-28 win over Namibia in Namboole, Uganda last Saturday.

The first iteration of World Rugby’s biennial Nations Cup competiton will start next year, with the Sables competing in the Second Division, by virtue of their qualification for the 2027 World Cup.

Before Zimbabwe won the first of their back-to-back Africa Cup titles in 2024, Tests against higher calibre opposition had been scarce. But the Nations Cup will give the Sables a good indication of how much ground they have to make up before their World Cup return.

While the line-up for the Nations Cup has yet to be confirmed, the Second Division will include the other five teams to have secured their ticket to Australia through the regional qualifiers: Georgia, Spain, Portugal and Romania from Europe and Rugby Asia champions Hong Kong China.

“We’re in discussions to do another November tour (Zimbabwe went to Asia to play South Korea and UAE last year), and then there’s the Nations Cup,” said Prior, a Super Rugby winner with the Queensland Reds.

“To be a part of that and to play against teams ranked between 12 and 24, that will be a game-changer in terms of exposure for our players and staff.” Once a Junior Wallaby, who played for the country of his birth at the U20s World Championship in 2010, Prior pledged his allegiance to Zimbabwe, where his parents were born, at the start of last year’s Africa Cup campaign.

Seven caps later, the 35-year-old has yet to be on the losing side, has two Africa Cup winner’s medals and is now looking forward to potentially playing at the World Cup on home soil.

Prior was Zimbabwe’s single biggest contributor in this season’s title-winning campaign, scoring 52 points – just over half of the Sables’ overall total – in the wins over Senegal, Kenya and latterly Namibia. However, the half-back credits head coach and former Currie Cup player, Pieter Benade, and people behind the scenes such as Kisset Chirengende, a sports executive with the Sharks in South Africa, and Lindsay Earle, the person in charge of the Sables’ Trust, for bringing it all together off the field and creating an enivornment and a pathway that has allowed Zimbabwe’s players to thrive.

“About 18 months ago, they got together and came up with a plan, believing that there was enough talent in Zimbabwe and sprinkled around the world to put together a really competitive side if we could get some of the guys to come back and work hard and spend more time together,” he said.

Zimbabwe have risen to an all-time high of 24th in the world rankings as a result of their recent triumph, and Prior believes there is still enormous potential for growth if the player drain that has happened in the past can be averted.

South Africa’s Tendai ‘The Beast’ Mtawarira and Australia’s David Pocock are two of the more high-profile examples of Zimbabwe-born players who’ve chased their dreams of playing international rugby elsewhere. “I don’t think Zim played a Test match in 2023, after missing out on World Cup qualification in 2022, so getting more frequent Tests and implementing a structure for home-bssed players that allows them to go all the way through from the U16s through to the Sables, without having to go overseas to chase Test rugby, is really important,” said Prior.

“There is certainly enough talent here. I was lucky enough to go and watch a local first XV game beteeen St John’s and Falcon and there was a young guy there, a young 10, who was kicking 53-metre drop goals; he was only 18. An immense talent.

“You only have to see what World Rugby has done with Fiji and the Drua (the home-based Fijian Super Rugby team). Developing that pathway and talent can set Zimbabwe rugby up for the next generation.”

Greater cohesion and a settled coaching and playing group, as well as the introduction of players like Prior, who has over 100 Super Rugby appearances behind him from time at the Reds, Brumbies and the Force, has helped to grow belief within the Sables’ camp.

“We had a mixture of guys in the team who’d been through a few campaigns and unfortunately had come up short. And we’ve got a few guys who’ve gone through and won the u20s African Cup. So I think there was just a deep sense of belief,” he said, giving an insight into the Zimbabwean mentality going into last weekend’s final.

“During the week we had a quiet confidence about us. I don’t think anyone wanted us to say it out loud for fear of jinxing us. But we felt like it was our time to write a new chapter in Zimbabwe rugby’s history and we had earned the right to be here.

“There was a lot of relief, a lot of jubilation in the changing room afterwards, that we’d finally done it.” – rugbypass.com

Chaminuka turns blame on referees

Tadious Manyepo

Zimpapers Sports Hub

SAUL CHAMINUKA has suggested referees could be conspiring to push Dynamos out of the Premiership, questioning the manner in which they are handling the ailing giants’ matches.

DeMbare are in a tight corner, dangling dangerously on 17th place on the Premier Soccer League log table with a pathetic 15 points from 21 matches.

The storied former champions have never shifted gears right from the onset of the 2025 sea-son, prompting club bosses to replace coach Lloyd “Mablanyo” Chigowe with Chaminuka two months ago.

Just like Chigowe, Chaminuka has also found the going tough, struggling to transform the team and ease their relegation worries although the quality of their football has marginally changed for the better.

Pressure has inevitably mounted on journeyman coach Chaminuka.

And yesterday the former Kwekwe United gaffer exploded lamenting how coaches are gagged from calling out poor refereeing yet the officials continue to determine the outcome of matches.

Dynamos lost 1-0 against Simba Bhora last Saturday, conceding the goal with just three minutes before time.

Former Dynamos midfielder Junior Makunike scored the solitary goal to squeeze the team that gave him fame against the walls.

Chaminuka has shifted the blame on the match officials.

He claims that by the time he scored the goal, Makunike should have long been red-carded “as he kept on kicking out my players five, six times.”

He feels the Glamour Boys should have scored a goal or two but the officials always stood on their way.

“I should be frank about this. It’s now very difficult to coach these players because we are playing against the referees not our opponents alone,” said Chaminuka.

“You spend time coaching players, working on tactics and the like to implement on match-days.

“But come match-day, you are facing both the opposition and the refs.

“That’s very unfortunate. It’s not helping our football in any way.

“Maybe there is a conspiracy against us. If you talk, you are sanctioned.

“I came to Dynamos aiming to improve how the team plays and when you think you have done that, the referees stand in the way, that’s bad.

“We lost against Ngezi Platinum Stars in pretty much the same fashion. They were awarded a penalty just out of nothing. The same happened again when we played FC Platinum. It’s hard and it hurts.”

He added “As a team we have our tactical flaws and areas we are not good at but let teams beat us without being aided by referees. We played TelOne the last time and we were beaten cleanly.

“We tried to come back but we wasted our chances. So, where we lose genuinely, we will acknowledge.

“The South African league has improved because the referees have improved as well.”

Now hanging down the cliff, Dynamos need more than just complaints to lift their game and play with much better consistency in order to stand a chance of surviving the chop at the end of the season.

DeMbare host equally-struggling Manica Diamonds at Rufaro tomorrow knowing that they have to start clearing these hurdles as they begin operation survival.

Heroes’ welcome for Sables

Don Makanyanga

Online Writer

Zimbabwe’s national rugby team, the Sables, received a heroes’ welcome at the Robert Mugabe International Airport last night (Tuesday) as they returned home after their historic World Cup qualification at the Rugby Africa Cup held in Uganda last week.

Zimbabwe secured their spot in the World Cup by defeating arch-rivals Namibia 30-18 in a thrilling match on Saturday.

Zimbabwe last qualified for the World Cup tournament in 1991.

Leading the triumphant Sables is the Deputy Minister of Sports, Recreation, Arts, and Culture, Emily Jesaya, who was present in Uganda as the team made history.

The Sables were warmly welcomed by the Director of Sports Eugenia Chidhakwa, SRC Director-General Eltah Nengomasha, along with other officials from the Sports and Recreation Commission.

Ben Curran, Brian Bennett reunite . . . No place for Richard Ngarava

ZIMBABWE will bank on openers Ben Curran and Brian Bennett to bring back stability when they face New Zealand at Queens Sports Club, in Bulawayo for the Test series.

The 16-man squad announced by Zimbabwe Cricket Yesterday will see the Chevrons take on New Zealand from 30 July to 3 August and then August 7 to 11.

Curran makes a return after recovery from the fractured hand suffered during a practice game against South Africa in Arundel early June.

He was hit by a Kagiso Rabada delivery in the fifth over of Zimbabwe’s innings and retired hurt on 4, before an x-ray confirmed the fracture.

He has been out since then.

Bennett on the other hand suffered concussion and missed part of the South Africa series, and the New Zealand test series marks his return to the longer version of the game.

The two top order have already shown that together, they can give Zimbabwe a firm foundation regardless of format.

Curran is brother to England internationals Sam and Tom, and he made his debut for Zimbabwe in December 2024.

He has played six Tests, including one against England, six ODIs while he remains uncapped in T20.

As the New Zealand test series approaches, he will carry part of the burden at a time the Chevrons have been humiliated in the T20I tri-series, losing three matches in a row, against South Africa (twice) and New Zealand, crashing out of the tri-series in the process.

In the 7 wicket defeat to South Africa (T20I) on Sunday, the Chevrons performance raised a lot of dust, with some questioning selection.

For the test, four changes to the Zimbabwe side that featured in the recent Test series against South Africa have been made.

Curran is joined in the squad by Sikandar Raza, Roy Kaia and Tanunurwa Makoni, with the quartet of Takudzwanashe Kaitano, Prince Masvaure, Wessly Madhevere and Kundai Matigimu making way. Bennett replaced Dion Myers.

The team will be led by Craig Ervine, with experienced campaigners Sean Williams and Blessing Muzarabani providing key support in the batting and bowling departments respectively.

There was no place for Brendan Taylor, whose three-and-a-half-year ban for breaching the ICC anti-corruption code ends on July 25 and was aiming to return for this series.

Richard Ngarava, who also had a back injury and only returned for the T20I is also not part of the squad.

The upcoming series will mark the first Test meeting between Zimbabwe and New Zealand since July-August 2016, when the visitors claimed a 2-0 series win at the same venue in Bulawayo.

 ZIMBABWE SQUAD FOR TEST SERIES VERSUS NEW ZEALAND

Craig Ervine (Captain), Brian Bennett, Tanaka Chivanga, Ben Curran, Trevor Gwandu, Roy Kaia, Tanun-urwa Makoni, Clive Madande, Vincent Masekesa, Wellington Masakadza, Blessing Muzarabani, Newman Nyamhuri, Sikandar Raza, Tafadzwa Tsiga, Nicholas Welch, Sean Williams. — Zimpapers Sports Hub/ ZimCricket / Cspncricinfo.com

SABLES expected in Harare Tuesday

Zimpapers Sports Hub

THE victorious Sables are expected to arrive in Harare on Tuesday.

This is after the Zimbabwe Rugby team managed to win the Rugby Africa Cup days ago in Uganda, earning a place at the 2027 Rugby World Cup in the process.

They got the better of Namibia in the final, and the finalists will now be banking on play-offs to qualify.

The Sables became the second African country, after South Africa, to book a place at the World Cup in Australia.

The Sports and Recreation Commission (SRC) will welcome the team.

“You are cordially invited to cover the arrival and Welcome Reception for the Rugby Africa Cup championship winning Sables at Robert Mugabe International Airport at 1830 hours this evening,” SRC said, inviting media for the event.

Islam spins Bangladesh to series leveller

Taijul Islam snared five wickets for the 15th time in a Test innings to lead Bangladesh to a series-levelling 101-run victory over the West Indies on the fourth evening of the second and final test at Sabina Park on Tuesday.

After Jaker Ali’s test-best innings of 91 lifted the tourists to 268 all out in their second innings and left the home team with a daunting victory target of 287, left-arm spinner Islam broke the back of the Caribbean side’s effort with five for 50 as they were dismissed for 185 in the day’s final session.

Fast bowler Nahid Rana, whose maiden five-wicket haul in the first innings pulled Bangladesh back into contention, had the satisfaction of administering the final rites when he yorked last man Shamar Joseph for his only wicket of the innings.

“It’s a great feeling to win a test match abroad which we don’t often do and all the boys really put in a tremendous effort,” said player-of-the-match Islam.

Seamers Taskin Ahmed and Hasan Mahmud took two wickets each with Taskin emerging as the leading wicket-taker in the brief series with 11 victims to his name.

Kavem Hodge topscored for the West Indies with 55, while captain Kraigg Brathwaite played with unusual adventure at the top of the order in contributing 43 off 63 deliveries.

But they lost wickets at regular intervals and eventually succumbed in just 50 overs as Bangladesh swiftly avenged the 201-run mauling they endured in the first Test in Antigua a week earlier.

“We wanted to be positive and I thought we started well but obviously we couldn’t carry it through to the end of the day,” said a rueful Brathwaite.

This was Bangladesh’s first test victory in the West Indies since their 2-0 sweep over a depleted Caribbean side in 2009.

Earlier Ali’s belligerent innings, which occupied 106 deliveries and was embellished by eight fours and five sixes, tilted the balance heavily in favour of Bangladesh as the highest successful run-chase in a Test at Sabina Park was the 212 achieved by the West Indies over Sri Lanka in 2003.

Such was the extent of the 26-year-old right-hander’s dominance of the morning that he contributed 62 of the 75 runs added by the tourists after resuming at the overnight position of 193-5.

Alzarri Joseph and Kemar Roach took three wickets each for the West Indies, Joseph ending Ali’s quest for a maiden Test hundred when he was last out, caught at deep midwicket a half-hour before lunch. – SuperSport.

Make Mine a Double, Says Matore

PRINCE Matore wants to close the year with a League and Cup double by winning the inaugural Champions of Champions tournament set to take place in Gweru this weekend.

The tournament will be held at the Bata Stadium on Saturday and Sunday.

The four teams promoted into the Premier Soccer League – Scottland FC, Kwekwe United, ZPC Hwange, and Triangle United – will clash in the maiden competition.

Matore guided Kwekwe United to success in the Central Region Division One championship race.

“This will be a meeting of regional champions and we want to be the champions and rule everyone.

“We are fully focused on winning the knockout competition.

“We know it won’t be easy but we are confident in our abilities and are looking forward to the challenge,” said Matore.

Matore urged Kwekwe United fans to come out and support the team over the weekend.

“We will need their energy and enthusiasm to drive us on and help us achieve our goal.

“We are all excited about the prospect of winning the competition and we hope that our fans will be able to join us in celebrating what we hope will be a successful weekend,” said Matore.

In the first semi-final, Kwekwe United will face Triangle United while Scotland FC will take on ZPC Hwange in the second semi-final.

TEAM ZIM IN HIGH SPIRITS

TEAM Zimbabwe appears to be in high spirits at the ongoing 2024 International Junior Science Olympiad Competition in Romania.

The six-member team expected to bring home some silverware.

The team, made up of former three students from St Johns College, Hellenic Academy and Arundel School, left for the European country earlier this week for the annual competition slated for December 2-12 in Bucharest, Romania.

The contest will comprise three tests in physics, chemistry and biology, each of which lasts between three and four hours.

The theoretical portion consists of two tests: a multiple choice questionnaire consisting of 30 questions, and a theoretical test.

The practical portion consists of three laboratory examinations, one for each field.

Zimbabwe is currently being represented by Munotida Mundira (St Johns College), Munotida Munhemo, Rutendo Kufakunesu (Arundel), Xander Stevenson and Joshua Carlise (both Hellenic Academy).

Speaking from Romania, Carola Bogezi described the mood in the Zimbabwean camp as upbeat.

“We are particularly excited that these young students, all aged 15 and below, have shown great determination, hard work and stamina over the last two school terms,” said Bogezi.

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