South Africa pays tribute to Clive Barker, its 1st post-apartheid national soccer team coach (2024)

ByGerald Imray

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CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — Clive Barker lifted the hopes of a nation still damaged by apartheid when he brought a team of Black and white players together to win the 1996 African Cup of Nations title, South Africa’s minister of sport said Monday in a tribute to the former national soccer team coach who died this weekend.

Barker, South Africa’s first post-apartheid coach, died Saturday at the age of 78 after being diagnosed with Lewy body dementia, his family said in a statement.

Minister of Sport Zizi Kodwa, South African Football Association president Danny Jordaan and Neil Tovey, the captain of the 1996 team, were part of a delegation that visited Barker’s family home in the eastern city of Durban to pay their respects.

Kodwa also said that it was his hope that Barker would be granted an official funeral, either by the national or provincial government.

“It’s one person who must be celebrated,” Kodwa said, recalling how Barker took a little-known and inexperienced South Africa team to the African title two years after the end of apartheid. “It was just at the dawn of our democracy. The hopes of our people were lifted high in ’95 and ’96.”

Barker was appointed South Africa coach about two months before Nelson Mandela was elected president in South Africa’s first all-race elections in 1994, which marked the official end of apartheid.

And while South Africa’s rugby team also provided an inspirational moment for the newly-democratic country by winning the 1995 Rugby World Cup, that Springboks rugby team was all-white for most of that tournament.

Barker’s South Africa soccer team captured the nation’s multiracial makeup much better, with white players like Tovey, Mark Fish and Eric Tinkler combining with Black stars Lucas Radebe, Doctor Khumalo, John Moshoeu and Phil Masinga.

“He had a team that truly reflected South Africa’s diversity,” Kodwa said.

South Africa’s 2-0 win over Tunisia in the 1996 African Cup final, a game attended by Mandela wearing a Bafana Bafana team shirt, brought South Africa its first and still only Cup of Nations title.

Barker was a promising player himself, only for his career to be cut short by injury.

Coaching was not an automatic career choice for him, though. He said in an interview on the FIFA website in 1997 that he fell into coaching after he struggled to make ends meet after his playing career ended with a serious knee injury.

“I worked during the day and drove taxis at night and I thought to myself, there has got to be something that is a little easier and less demanding than working day and night,” Barker said. “So I decided the only other thing that I had some talent at — besides singing — was to become a football coach. So I started out with that in 1974.”

It was the right choice. Barker had a 42-year coaching career in South Africa, starting in the days of apartheid and leading him to break the regime’s racist laws by traveling for games to Black townships where whites weren’t meant to go.

Barker’s history of disregarding those apartheid laws endeared him to the majority of South Africans.

“Your Father was a Godsend,” Irvin Khoza, South Africa’s Premier Soccer League chairman, said in a condolence message to Barker’s son Gavin.

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More AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports

South Africa pays tribute to Clive Barker, its 1st post-apartheid national soccer team coach (2024)

FAQs

What has been one major problem in South Africa since the end of apartheid? ›

Thirty years since the end of Apartheid, South Africa still grapples with its legacy. Unequal access to education, unequal pay, segregated communities and massive economic disparities persists, much of it is reinforced by existing institutions and attitudes.

What is the history of the South Africa national football team? ›

Having played their first match in 1906, they returned to the world stage in 1992, after 16 years of being banned from FIFA, and 40 years of effective suspension due to the apartheid system. South Africa became the first African nation to host the FIFA World Cup when it was granted host status for the 2010 edition.

What were 3 reasons that influenced the end of apartheid? ›

Years of violent internal protest, weakening white commitment, international economic and cultural sanctions, economic struggles, and the end of the Cold War brought down white minority rule in Pretoria.

Who started apartheid in South Africa? ›

Racial segregation, sanctioned by law, was widely practiced in South Africa before 1948. But when the National Party, led by Daniel F. Malan, gained office that year, it extended the policy and gave it the name apartheid.

Why was South Africa removed from FIFA? ›

In 1976, after the Soweto uprising, they were formally expelled from FIFA. South Africa was suspended by FIFA from 1961 to 1992 because of the country's apartheid policies, banning the country from international competition (including the FIFA World Cup), and severely stunting the growth of the domestic game.

How many world Cups has South Africa won? ›

The Springboks have the most tournament wins at the Rugby World Cup - having won 4 times - although they have participated in fewer tournaments. In addition to this, they are the only rugby team to have won every World Cup final they have played in.

What is the name of South Africa football team? ›

Bafana Bafana is the nickname for South Africa's men's national football (soccer) team. The name comes from the Zulu for “the boys, the boys.”

What are the problems in South Africa? ›

These include reports about corruption and mismanagement in government, significant unemployment, violent crime, insufficient infrastructure, and poor government service delivery to impoverished communities; these factors were exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic.

What were the problems caused by apartheid in South Africa? ›

Apartheid has negatively affected the lives of all South African children but its effects have been particularly devastating for black children. The consequences of poverty, racism and violence have resulted in psychological disorders, and a generation of maladjusted children may be the result.

What was the result of apartheid struggle? ›

The liberation of South Africa from racist tyranny and the national reconciliation that followed were the result of the struggle of the South African people and the international action promoted by the United Nations for almost half a century.

What were two consequences of apartheid in South Africa? ›

It does so in a variety of ways, including: the humiliating effects on blacks and arrogance inducing effects on whites; the disruption of family-life by the enforced migrant labor system; the stunted brain-development and behavioral effects that result from the inexcusably widespread childhood malnutrition in that ...

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