Connect with us

Sports

Former Highlanders coach Methembe Ndlovu gets top US job

Published

on

BY OWN CORRESPONDENT

Trinity College has announced the appointment of former Highlanders Football Club coach Methembe Ndlovu as head men’s soccer coach.

Advertisement

Ndlovu comes to Trinity owning a wealth of impressive coaching and playing experience at many levels.

A four-time All-Ivy League player at Dartmouth College, Ndlovu coached at numerous clubs both in the United States and abroad and most recently served as an assistant coach at Penn State University and women’s associate head coach at Claremont-Mudd-Scripps in California.

Ndlovu was also the Africa CEO of Grassroot Soccer and played both professionally and for the Zimbabwe national team.  He replaces Mike Pilger who retired from coaching following the 2021 season.

Advertisement

“We are thrilled to welcome Methembe to the Bantam family and have him write a new chapter in the long and storied history of men’s soccer at Trinity College,” said Trinity athletic director Drew Galbraith.

“His personal history with the game is marked by success at every level.

“Methembe has a clear vision for our men’s soccer programme that includes competitive success and the holistic development of our student-athletes.

Advertisement

“He is a skilled teacher and his passion for the game is contagious.”

Ndlovu earned his bachelor’s degree in government from Dartmouth in 1997, where he starred on the pitch for the Big Green.

He went on to a professional career that saw him spend six years with the Albuquerque Geckos, Highlanders FC in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, and the Boston Bulldogs.

Advertisement

In addition, Ndlovu earned nine international caps with the full Zimbabwe Men’s National Team between 1997 and 1999.

Ndlovu started his coaching career as a player assistant coach with the Cape Cod Crusaders, then of the PDL, in 2002.

In his first season as head coach in 2003, he led the Crusaders to the 2003 PDL National Championship.

Advertisement

He then joined the PDL Indiana Invaders as general manager and head coach.

A holder of the USSF B License, he was voted 2004 PDL National Coach of the Year.

That year, Ndlovu also served as a volunteer assistant coach with the University of Notre Dame men’s soccer team under one of his mentors, the legendary Bobby Clark.

Advertisement

Ndlovu was the head coach of the Highlanders Football Club from 2006 to July 2008, leading the club to a CAF Africa Champions League qualification in 2006 and the CAF Confederations Cup in 2008.

Ndlovu was also the Zimbabwe national under-20 men’s head coach from 2007 to 2010, and guided that squad to the Cosafa championship in 2007 and to the Cosafa silver medal in 2008.

Ndlovu went on to found and serve as CEO and technical director of Bantu Rovers Football Club in Zimbabwe for 10 years (2008-17).

Advertisement

Bantu fostered sporting and academic excellence, sent players to professional leagues in Africa and beyond, and sent student-athletes to prestigious prep schools in the United States.

As CEO, he was responsible for all club operations and as technical director he oversaw the clubs’ technical staff.

He re-entered college coaching at Penn State under another of his mentors, Jeff Cook, in 2020 and helped guide the Athenas to a 9-4-3 record at Claremont-Mudd-Scripps last fall.

Advertisement

Ndlovu’s achievements as a co-founder of Grassroot Soccer, Inc. (GRS), a youth health, non-governmental organization that uses soccer as a tool for social change, is equally if not more impressive as those as a player and coach.

In 2010, Ndlovu was awarded the Dartmouth College Martin Luther King Social Justice Award for his vision, enthusiasm and persistence in youth health education.

Ndlovu was part of the organisation’s Africa leadership team and was The Grassroot Soccer Africa CEO when he left the organisation’s management team in 2018 to serve on the GRS Global board as a trustee.

Advertisement

“Trinity College stands apart in its student-centred culture, reputation for excellence in both academics and athletics, commitment to the whole person and deliberate fostering of an environment of inclusion,” said Ndlovu.

“I am truly honoured to accept the position of head men’s soccer coach at Trinity College and join the team of extraordinary coaches and staff.

“ I am grateful to Drew Galbraith, Kristen Noone  and the entire search committee for selecting me for this role.”

Advertisement

Trinity men’s soccer finished the 2021 season with an 3-11-1 overall record and an 0-9-01 mark in the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC).

The Bantams have qualified for 10 NESCAC Championship Tournaments and played in the NCAA Tournament in 1964, 1965, 1967, 1968, 1997, and 2011.

What people are saying about Methembe Ndlovu

Advertisement

Bobby Clark, former head coach, Notre Dame, Stanford, New Zealand and Dartmouth

“Methembe Ndlovu was one of the best players I ever coached.

“His big strength was reading the game and he brought this nicely into his role as a coach.

Advertisement

“It was a joy to have him as part of my staff while I was coaching at Notre Dame and he was coaching the Indiana Invaders in the Professional Development League.

“I am confident the Trinity players will enjoy having him as their coach.”

Jeff Cook, head coach, Penn State University

Advertisement

“Trinity College have made an inspired choice to lead their men’s soccer programme.

“Methembe Ndlovu is one of the most outstanding, knowledgeable, and thoughtful coaches that I have had the pleasure to be around.

“I know that Methembe will put his vast experience to work right away shaping the student-athletes he works with into a high functioning team.

Advertisement

“His commitment to the overall development of young people is unparalleled, Methembe’s impact will be transformational.

“I am very excited to follow the Trinity programme, exciting times are ahead for the Bantams.”

 

Advertisement

Brian Wiese, head coach, Georgetown University

“Methembe is that rare form of coach who has a breadth of experience that might be unrivaled in college soccer that allows him to be a great teacher of the game on the field and a great teacher of life off of it.

“I’m looking forward to seeing the program that Methembe will build at Trinity to compete in the best DIII soccer conference in the country.

Advertisement

“The Trinity soccer family couldn’t have found a better coach, and, truly, a better person to lead their programme.”- Trinity College

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

Sports

Econet Victoria Falls Marathon 2023 roars into life

Published

on

By

BY OWN CORRESPONDENT

The 15th edition of the Econet Victoria Falls Marathon is set to roar into life today in the scenic tourism destination of Victoria Falls.

Advertisement

Organisers say the marathon, now widely recognized at the number one marathon in Africa, has attracted over 5 000 runners and tourists to the event this year.

Earlier on, Econet Group chief executive officer Douglas Mboweni welcomed all local and international runners to the event, and wished all participants the best in their races.

“As the headline sponsor, we proudly welcome you this great event, and wish you all the very best during your run and as you take time to enjoy this special and scenic resort of Victoria Falls with friends and family,” said Mboweni.

Advertisement

“We have been working closely with the race’s technical organisers, the  local authorities, tourism players, emergency services and many other stakeholders, and I am confident that we will host a successful event,” he added.

Mboweni noted that the Econet Victoria Marathon promotes physical, mental and emotional wellness and also contributes to the economy of the country, especially in the travel and tourism industry.

“The Econet Victoria Falls Marathon generates significant interest in Zimbabwe as a tourist destination, and that is something we are proud contribute to,” he said.

Advertisement

The marathon attracted over 4 500 runners the last year 40 countries.

Organisers expect it to attract visitors from over 50 countries this year.

“The economic benefits that this event brings – both at local and macro level – is something we are pleased to be associated with, and wish to continue being a part of,” the Econet Group CEO said.

Advertisement

Participants to the marathon have travelled from as far afield as the Americas, Europe, Australia and the rest of Africa.

In addition to the main 42 kilometre marathon event, there are various categories for different fitness levels, including a half-marathon (21km), the popular 7.5km family fun run, and a 10.5km half

 

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Sports

Luton promoted to Premier League after shootout victory against Coventry

Published

on

By

BY BEN FISHER

This time Rob Edwards could celebrate. The Luton manager had hared off down the touchline with four minutes of extra time to go to celebrate what he thought was the winning goal in front of the Luton supporters, eating up 45 yards of Wembley turf, only to retreat to his technical area ashen-faced after glancing up at the big screen confirming Joseph Taylor’s strike, which would have been his first for the club, had been disallowed for handball. Jonathan Panzo, on cold as a substitute, dawdled on the ball and Taylor, a 20-year-old on his sixth appearance, nicked it from the Coventry defender, but surged through on goal with the help of his right hand.

Advertisement

Edwards covered his face in embarrassment but an agonising penalty shootout followed and Fankaty Dabo missed the crucial spot-kick as Luton won promotion to the Premier League at Coventry’s expense, winning 6-5 on penalties. Up in the stands, there were tears of joy for Luton’s chief executive, among many at the club who have been on their journey from non-league until this point. Until Dabo’s miss, the penalties had been immaculate. Dabo was inconsolable.
Mark Robins, in a Coventry polo shirt, smiled wryly into the camera as the teams lined up before kick-off. This stadium was a picture, one end a shade of sky blue, the other a blanket of orange. Rob Edwards, hands on hips, swivelled to survey the scene one last time before the referee, Michael Oliver, got things under way. Luton had two first-half goals disallowed, the first inside five minutes with Gabriel Osho ruled offside after squeezing the ball in against a post; a determined Tom Lockyer had powered a header towards goal but what would have been a scruffy opener was chalked off. On 41 minutes Luton had the ball in the net once more but Elijah Adebayo was penalised for handball after Callum Doyle’s panicked clearance smacked him on the arm. Luton could have been out of sight.

There were eight minutes of first-half stoppage time, much of which was because of a freakish incident. Lockyer appeared to collapse when back-pedalling to read an early Coventry attack. Lockyer received five minutes of treatment and was carried off on a stretcher wearing an oxygen mask. Luton later confirmed the Wales defender was taken to hospital for further tests. Luton’s supporters shielded their eyes from the sun and Edwards pulled his concerned players away from Lockyer to give them an impromptu on-pitch team talk. Pelly Ruddock Mpanzu, whose first game for Luton was in non-league 10 years ago, took the armband. Both teams were unchanged from their last match
The incident did not disrupt Luton’s flow and they scored on 23 minutes. Fifteen yards or so from the Luton goalline Alfie Doughty, the Hattters’ left wing-back, sent a long ball upfield towards Adebayo. Kyle McFadzean was one-on-one with the striker and Adebayo’s twists and turns led the Coventry centre-back a merry dance. Clark’s run was not tracked and after Adebayo chopped inside one last time he located his teammate on the edge of Coventry’s 18-yard box. The Luton midfielder took a brilliant first touch with his right boot and lashed in with his left with his next touch.

Luton’s centre-forwards, Carlton Morris and Adebayo, caused Coventry’s three-man central defence no end of problems. Coventry were rattled and Luke McNally shanked a routine pass out to his right straight out for a throw-in on halfway. Morris bullied Doyle, the defender on loan from Manchester City, and his knockdown laid the ball on neatly for Mpanzu but his shot was tame and comfortably gathered by Ben Wilson in the Coventry goal. Coventry were frozen for much of the first half and did not fashion a meaningful attack until minutes before the interval. The bustling Gustavo Hamer met Jake Bidwell’s hanging cross at the back post but sent his shot over.Coventry roused before half-time but nevertheless it was no surprise Robins changed shape. Matt Godden, a striker, replaced Jamie Allen, the midfielder who had failed to bring Viktor Gyökeres into the game. Liam Kelly, the Coventry captain and only player in the starting lineups to play in this fixture when they were in League Two five years ago, skied a shot after a neat move on the edge of the box. The Arsenal loanee Brooke Norton-Cuffy went on a rampaging run in the first half and his willing was a positive for Coventry to cling on to. Ten minutes into the second half Norton-Cuffy sent a devilish cross in from the right but Amari’i Bell was on hand to clear.

Advertisement

Coventry were a different beast now and levelled on 66 minutes after Gyokeres and Hamer dovetailed to devastating effect. Gyokeres gladly took a bump from Osho to help Coventry retain possession inside their own half and then was fed in down the left channel. He drove forward and calmly spied the advancing Hamer to his right. Hamer side-footed the ball in first time and pandemonium followed in one half of the ground. McFadzean endeavoured to have a quiet word with Robins pitchside. The Coventry fans made sure that was a tricky task.

No sooner were the Coventry supporters swooning over Hamer than the midfielder was forced off with injury after landing awkwardly. Hamer attempted to carry on but was grounded and then replaced by Kasey Palmer, a substitute when Huddersfield won promotion here on penalties six years ago. Hamer’s afternoon ended with an ice pack strapped around his right ankle and Palmer back on the bench, with Robins substituting the substitute in extra time.

It seemed the biggest talking point of added time arrived when Clark was deemed to have dived after Wilson rushed from his goal. Up in the stands Howard Webb, the head of the PGMOL, bit his nails. That was nothing compared with the intoxicating drama that would follow. SOURCE: THE GUARDIAN

Advertisement

Continue Reading

Sports

Victoria Falls hosts chess championship games

Published

on

By

BY NOTHANDO DUBE 

Chess, the newly embraced game in Zimbabwean Schools has taken Matabeleland North Province by storm, with many schools taking it up.

Advertisement

The brain game has gained popularity with players from Early Childhood  Development to Secondary Schools.

This year, the Zimbabwe Chess Federation has introduced a National Chess League to be played across the provinces throughout the country, under the Crystal Candy National Schools league banner.

 The first League games took  place this Saturday and the second will be played on June 24 where each school will field one team each, made up of ten players, five males and five females. 

Advertisement

In Matabeleland North,  Mosi-oa-Tunya Hihh School is host the primary schools while Grace Mission Secondary takes care of  the  secondary schools.

Eight primary schools have set themselves for the battle meant to decided on the  two teams who will proceed to the second league games in June. 

The participating primary schools are Chinotimba, Mother Touch, Baobab, Happy Hearts, Kings and Grace Mission.

Advertisement

 A total of eighty players will make up the primary schools competitors while five  schools will make up the secondary schools competitors

The league fixtures for secondary school are made up of David Livingstone, Grace Mission, Higher Learning Centre, EATC and Matetsi.

 The age groups for primary will be Under 10 Junior and Under 14 Seniors, whilst secondary school learners will play under age groups under 16 and Under 20. 

Advertisement

Last term, on March 23 and and 24, a total of 203 secondary school chess players gathered at Lupane’s Mabhikwa High school for  Provincial Chess Tournament, making it the highest number so far in the history of Provincial games. 

Chess is game of the brain which teaches players to balance their emotions and also to make informed decisions. The calculative nature of its moves improve learners’ mathematical skills. 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2022 VicFallsLive. All rights reserved, powered by Advantage