Cape Town brings Netball World Cup to Africa
After more than a decade, South Africa will finally host a showpiece tournament again.
Front Row: Clare Briegal (CEO of INF), Alec Moemi (Director General of the Department of Sport) and Blache de la Guerre (CEO of Netball SA). Back Row: Gert Oosthuizen (Deputy Minister of Sport and Recreation), Cecilia Molokwane (President of Netball SA), Molly Rhone (INF President), Tokozile Xasa (Minister of Sport and Recreation), JP Smith (Mayco Member of Safety and Security, City of Cape Town) and Anroux Marais (MEC Cultural Affairs and Sports, Western Cape Province) during the 2023 Netball World Cup Bid Announcement and Legacy Presentation at Cape Town International Convention Center on March 07, 2019 in Cape Town, South Africa. (Photo by Grant Pitcher/Gallo Images)
Bringing the prestigious tournament to Africa for the first time will offer an unprecedented opportunity to promote and develop the sport, local and international officials said on Thursday, after Cape Town was unveiled as the host city for the 2023 Netball World Cup.
The International Netball Federation (INF) confirmed the Mother City would hold the 16th edition of the quadrennial tournament.
It would be the first time the event would be staged on the continent.
“Hosting this World Cup will make more young girls in our country participate in the sport, especially young girls from the working class background,” said Netball South Africa chief executive Blanche de la Guerre.
“It will also play a major role in contributing to social cohesion and nation building because that’s what sport is all about.”
The New Zealand netball federation had hoped the tournament would form part of its centenary celebrations in 2023, after Cape Town had been locked in a bidding war with Auckland.
The INF, however, had felt Cape Town would offer greater value to the sport in terms of local and global development.
“The INF board decided that the significant investment that the South African government and Western Cape were prepared to make over the next four years in netball facilities and coaching programmes in South Africa, the African continent and beyond would deliver a greater impact on the development of global netball,” said INF president Molly Rhone.
“The 2023 Netball World Cup has the potential to transform the lives of women and girls across the region, the country, the continent and the world.”
According to the bid committee, the tournament would cost around R68 million to organise, and it had a potential economic impact of R2.5 billion.
South Africa is also set to become only the second country, after England, to host the football, rugby, cricket and netball World Cup events.
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