Football

Cosafa under 20

23 October 2018– The 2018 COSAFA Under-20 Championships are set to light up Zambia from 30 November 30 – 13 December in what will be the latest installment of the vital regional tournament that has been a breeding ground for so much Southern African talent down the years.

The tournament will be again be staged in Kitwe following the successful hosting of the event last year, where South Africa were crowned champions after they defeated Lesotho 2-1 in the decider.

Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia, Zimbabwe and associate member Reunion have confirmed their participation, the first time they will take part in a COSAFA tournament for the first time.

Zambia will be keen to regain the title they lost last year, especially on home soil, as fans get to see the new batch of young stars from the Southern African  sub-continent.

In that regard, the COSAFA Under-20 Championship is vital and has played its part in its many guises down the years.

Running through the list of past stars to grace the finals, it reads like a Who’s Who of Southern African football and all will have benefitted from the exposure they got to top level competition.

From a South African perspective, the likes of Itumeleng Khune, Lerato Chabangu, Daine Klate, Elrio van Heerden and Lebohang Mokoena all represented their country at this level and gone on to forge successful club and international careers.

Other young stars such as Clifford Mulenga and Isaac Chansa (both Zambia), Tinashe Nengomasha and Onismor Bhasera (both Zimbabwe), as well as Jimmy Zakazaka (Malawi), have used the tournament to persuade clubs outside of their country that they have a bright future in the game.

The tournament was first played in 1983 but was a little-recognised get-together of a few of the stalwarts of the region, including Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi and Botswana.

The Apartheid practices of South Africa at the time meant they were excluded, and only entered the fray for the first time in 1993.

Those early years were dominated by the ‘Two Zs’, with Zambia winning six and Zimbabwe three of the first nine tournaments held.

South Africa were the first team to break the mould when they triumphed in 2000, having been losing finalists in 1995 and 1999.

A year earlier, in 1999, they had taken over the hosting of the event, which before then had been spread around the region. Each tournament up until 2009 was held in the Rainbow Nation, but the winners were less easy to predict.

Madagascar became only the fourth country to win the event when they surprisingly triumphed in 2005, beating shock finalists Lesotho 1-0 in the final.

Before Lesotho three years ago, the previous two instalments, in 2010 and 2011, were hosted by Botswana, with Zambia extending their winning streak to three with success in both.

They added an 11thtitle in 2016 when they romped through the competition, defeating hosts South Africa 2-1 in the final.

South Africa regained the trophy last year though after Zambia surprisingly exited in the pool stages.

But more than lifting the trophy, the tournament is about developing the talent of tomorrow and giving young players the chance to compete with their peers in a highly-competitive environment that should help to prepare them for the challenges of future international football.

 

PREVIOUS WINNERS

1983    Zambia

1985    Zimbabwe

1986    Zambia

1988    Zimbabwe

1990    Zimbabwe

1993    Zambia

1995    Zambia

1997    Zambia

1999    Zambia

2000    South Africa

2001    Zimbabwe

2002    Zimbabwe

2003    Zambia

2004    South Africa

2005    Madagascar

2006    South Africa

2007    Zimbabwe

2008    South Africa

2009    Zambia

2010    Zambia

2011    Zambia

2013    South Africa

2016    Zambia

2017    South Africa

 

MOST WINS

11 – Zambia

6 – Zimbabwe, South Africa

1 – Madagascar

SOURCED FROM SAFA WEBSITE.

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