JOHANNESBURG - In honour of the Samba Boys' hard-won victory over the Democratic People's Republic of Korea last Tuesday night, which I for one found enthralling viewing, I made a return to pages 97-98 of a book called More Than Just a Game: Soccer v Apartheid by Chuck Korr and Marvin Close.
It's a fun book - all about those prisoners who played football on Robben Island and set up the famous Makana Football Association. Some of them have since become leading citizens including, inter alia, Jacob Zuma, Tokyo Sexwale, and Dikgang Moseneke.
Why it was written by a couple of Americans, one an academic historian, the other a writer, I do not rightly know. Seems to me it would have been a great project for a local scribe - but so it goes. It was published in 2008 by Collins and there was a local edition, marketed by Jonathan Ball Publishers, Collins' agents, which I saw on the shelves last year, or maybe it was during 2008.
But back to page 97:
"A gentle breeze blew off the Atlantic and across the island as Lizo Sitoto walked out into the brilliant sunshine, his soccer studs clattering across the concrete floor of the compound. (T)eammate Tony Suze was alongside him ... (and they) exchanged firm, confident handshakes and wished one another good luck for the game ahead. The date was August 1, 1970 and the match was an early fixture in the league's second season. Although Manong was still the leading team, today it was playing against Rangers, and Lizo knew enough to expect a bruising encounter.
"The Rangers captain was a tough, no- nonsense ANC activist called Jacob Zuma, known to be as uncompromising on the soccer pitch as he was in the political arena. The son of a policeman who died when he was just a child, Zuma had become involved in politics at an early age, joining the ANC as a 17-year-old in 1959.