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WOMEN'S WORLD CUP 2023

Women’s World Cup 2023: Zambia in-depth team guide and prediction

Full information on the Zambia squad for the tournament in Australia and New Zealand: the coach, star player, rising star...

Update:
Full information on the Zambia squad for the tournament in Australia and New Zealand: the coach, star player, rising star...
ANNA SZILAGYIEFE

We take a look at Zambia in the latest team guide for the Women’s World Cup 2023. This article is part of a collaboration with The Guardian along with leading newspapers from each of the participating countries at the tournament.

This guide was written by Calvin Kaumba Chikenge for BolaNews.

Overview

The Zambia women’s side is one of Africa’s fastest-rising teams, having been the only African women’s football representative at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. The Copper Queens also reached the 2022 Women’s Africa Cup of Nations (Wafcon) semi-finals in Morocco, which secured their qualification for a Women’s World Cup debut in 2023.

Women’s football is still developing in Zambia. However the national team has achieved significant success despite the challenges, including third place at the 2022 Africa Cup. The majority of the players have been employed full-time by the air force and army to play football for the two most prominent women’s military clubs in Zambia: Red Arrows and Green Buffaloes.

Despite having a young squad, with some of the local players earning less than $50 a month at their respective clubs, Zambia defeated top-ranked teams such as Senegal, Tunisia and Nigeria at Wafcon in Morocco. Their only defeat was by eventual tournament winners South Africa in the semi-finals.

During the tournament, Zambia were missing their top strikers, Barbra Banda and Racheal Kundananji, who were disqualified from competing due to high testosterone levels, according to the Zambian FA. Following Wafcon, Zambia won the 2022 Cosafa Women’s Championship for the first time with Banda finishing as the top scorer with 10 goals and named player of the tournament.

However Zambia have struggled this year, including a 10-2 aggregate loss to South Korea across back-to-back friendlies in April. Banda and Kundananji are still trying to adjust to playing as a pair since their return to the squad, with the coach, Bruce Mwape, admitting to BolaNews that “there is a lot of individual play up front; everyone wants to show that they are stars. We are currently working on it.”

Kundananji finished the 2022-23 season as the second-highest goalscorer in the Spanish league, with 25 goals for Madrid CFF. Banda scored nine goals in six games for Shanghai Shengli in the Chinese Super League.

Zambia head coach Bruce Mwape.
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Zambia head coach Bruce Mwape.ANNA SZILAGYIEFE

The coach

Bruce Mwape took over as head coach in 2018 after leaving Zambia Super League club Nchanga Rangers. A holder of the Caf A licence, the highest level of coaching licence attainable on the continent, Mwape has led the Zambia women’s team to the Africa Cup of Nations twice, the first time being in the same year he was appointed. Mwape has a reputation for playing physical, attacking football. He has previously been chastised for the team’s poor defending, but he has stated: “We are working on improving our defence, and we will be fine at the World Cup.”

Star player

During Tokyo 2020, Barbra Banda made history by becoming the first woman in Olympic history to score consecutive hat-tricks. Despite the underwhelming Copper Queens’ performance, the Shanghai Shengli forward stood out as one of the most exciting players at the tournament. On her aims going into her debut World Cup, Banda told FAZ media: “We need to go there with full force and the mentality of winning.”

Rising star

Evarine Susan Katongo is widely regarded as Zambia’s next big star. The 20-year-old midfielder began her career at the Luyando Foundation in Lusaka’s shanty township of Chinika. She quickly rose through the ranks of the Zambia national team, becoming a key figure in the squad at the age of 18.

Katongo is best known for her hold-up play and dribbling abilities. However, she has had some issues at the club level, having not played for six months after the Wafcon due to contractual disputes between Luyando and the Zambia Institute for Sustainable Development (ZISD FC), which were later resolved. This hasn’t slowed her progress, and Katongo stood out in a friendly match against Tanzania at a packed 10,000-seat Woodlands Stadium in Lusaka, thrilling the crowd.

Did you know?

Banda, the Copper Queens captain, was a professional boxer with Oriental Quarries Boxing Promotion from 2015 to 2017. She competed in the bantamweight division five times, winning all of her fights, four by knockout.

Standing of women’s football in Zambia

Women’s football has improved significantly since the late 2000s, becoming more popular among Zambians, with the national age-group teams now regularly competing in international tournaments. The FAZ launched the Women’s Super Division in 2021, resulting in an increase in the number of women’s clubs. Despite the fact that the league is solely sponsored by FAZ and is not broadcast on television, it has produced several players who are now playing professional football outside of Zambia. This pathway has changed the lives of some international players, with the top earners in the squad taking home over $5,000 per month. During the Women’s World Cup trophy tour, the FAZ president, Andrew Kamanga, said: “I wish to appeal to our partners in the corporate world to support women’s football.”

Realistic aim at the World Cup?

The majority of the Copper Queens have never played professional-level football before, and the technical staff are also adapting to international standards. The team’s primary goal should be to gain experience, and progressing from Group C (containing Japan, Spain and Costa Rica) will be a huge bonus. Banda told the FAZ media that the World Cup is a “huge task, but the mentality of being a player is that we need to be positive every time.”

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