South Africa's Kgatlana puts grief aside to star at World Cup
Soccer Football - FIFA Women’s World Cup Australia and New Zealand 2023 - Group G - South Africa v Italy - Wellington Regional Stadium, Wellington, New Zealand - August 2, 2023 South Africa's Thembi Kgatlana receives medical attention after the match as South Africa qualify for the knockout stages of the World Cup REUTERS/Amanda Perobelli
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When South
Africa's historic run at the Women's World Cup finally comes to an end, the
first thing Thembi Kgatlana will do back home is visit three graves.
Kgatlana
scored a 92nd-minute winner over Italy to give South Africa their first World
Cup victory and a place in the last 16 against the Netherlands on Sunday in
Sydney.
But it was
what the skipper said afterwards that made even more headlines, revealing that
three family members had died in as many weeks.
"I
could have gone home but I chose to stay with the girls, because that is how
much it means," she said.
The
27-year-old forward plays for Racing Louisville in the United States but
whenever back in South Africa she was virtually inseparable from her aunt
Mamogolo.
The
62-year-old died just before the World Cup in Australia and New Zealand.
"Mamogolo
put 200 rand ($11) aside so they could lunch together when Thembi returned from
the World Cup," Kgatlana's mother told the Sowetan newspaper.
"That
is what hurts Thembi most - she will never get to enjoy a meal with her beloved
aunt," said Koko Kgatlana.
"Mamogolo
virtually raised her. They had an incredible bond. She was always there for
Thembi and they did everything together."
South
Africa's star player is also mourning the recent loss of two other aunts.
One was 62
and the other 100, and it took all the persuasive powers of her parents to
prevent Kgatlana abandoning the World Cup and returning home.
"I told
Thembi to be strong. When she comes back we will take her to the graves so that
she can say goodbye," said her father Matlhomola.
'Brutal
injury'
Kgatlana
also almost saw her World Cup dreams shattered by injury, having suffered a
potentially career-ending torn Achilles tendon a year ago.
She
sustained the injury at the Africa Women's Cup of Nations - which South Africa
went on to win for the first time - and was out for 10 months.
"I have
come back from a very, very brutal injury," the attacker, who has also
played in China, Portugal and Spain, said after the Italy win.
Kgatlana was
born in a township 50 kilometres (30 miles) west of Johannesburg.
Her mother,
a former sprinter, wanted Kgatlana to play netball.
But when she
put that to a young Kgatlana at the time, Koko Kgatlana recalls her replying:
"Mama, football is going to be my talent."
Kgatlana
quickly made her mark as a footballer, playing in under-17 club competitions at
13 and in under-20 tournaments one year later.
It will be
the early hours Sunday in South Africa when the team play, but football fans
back home will abandon the warmth of their beds and brave the winter cold to
watch.
The
Netherlands, runners-up to the USA at the last World Cup, are hot favourites.
But Banyana
Banyana (The Girls) - labelled "traitors" by a South African men's
football official after a pay dispute - and Kgatlana never know when to quit.


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