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AmaZulu F.C.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromAmaZulu F.C. (South Africa))
South African association football club
This article is about the South African football club. For the Zimbabwean club, seeAmazulu FC (Zimbabwe).

Football club
AmaZulu
Full nameAmaZulu Football Club
NicknamesUsuthu
Amaqhawe (Heroes)
Founded1932; 93 years ago (1932) (asZulu Royals)
GroundMoses Mabhida Stadium
Capacity55,000
ChairmanSandile Zungu
CoachArthur Zwane
LeagueBetway Premiership
2024–256th of 16
Websitewww.amazulufc.net
Club crest of AmaZulu used until 2009

AmaZulu Football Club is a South African professionalsoccer club based in the city ofDurban in theKwaZulu Natal province, that plays in thePremiership, the first tier of the South African football league system. The club's nickname,Usuthu, is the royal house of King Cetshwayo ka Mpande.

History

[edit]

Early history (1932–1973)

[edit]

One of the oldest clubs in South Africa, AmaZulu was formed by Zulu migrant workers in 1932 and originally named Zulu Royal Conquerors. The club was then introduced to Zulu kingSolomon, who changed the team's name to Zulu Royals and their colours to royal blue and white, and also added the shield to their logo.[1]

Initially, Prince Bayisikili was placed as the team guardian at eMsizini and later replaced by Prince Sithela and the team's headquarter was at theeMbelebeleni Royal Kraal by then the team colours had changed to bottle green and white. On the day of King Bhekizulu's funeral in the year 1968, the team went to play a Cup game against SAPPI Homestars at eMandeni, which they lost 4–2. On the day of the funeral the club was supposed to escort the King's coffin but Mr. Shezi, Mr. Nsele, Mr. Magwaza ended up escorting the King wearing the team's uniform.[1]

After that game an argument had broken up between the supporters of the club because some of them including Prince Sithela criticized the fact that, how could the team play a game on the day of the funeral of the Zulu King, when the team was supposed to mourn the King's death. The continuation of the argument led to Mr Gideon Sibiya and Mr. Ntuli who accompanied the club to eMandeni decided to take the club away fromeMbelebeleni toeWema and then it was no longer recognized at theeMbelebeleni Royal Kraal.[1]

At the end of 1970 the remaining committee members consisting of Mr Mkhize and Mr Ralph Mabaso decided to rebuild the team from scratch, recruited players, acquired a kit and appointed Mr Bethuel Masondo as the team manager. The committee went on to register the club as Zulu Royals United and Mr. Bethuel Masondo was the sole director. They decided to take the team back to eMbelebeleni Royal Kraal as its headquarters.[1]

In 1971 a team calledAfrican Wanderers which was located in Kwa-Zulu Natal were experiencing problems while playing in the National Professional League (NPSL) which led the NPSL to take a decision that the Kwa-Zulu Natal Football Association must suspend African Wanderers from the NPSL and then recommend another team from Kwa-Zulu Natal to replace them. The Kwa-Zulu Natal Football Association then recommended the following teams: Union Jacks, Durban City All Black, Zulu Royals United or Young Dribblers.[1]

The National Professional Soccer League (NPSL) at that time chairman, Mr RD Sishi, decided that Zulu Royal's United must replace African Wanderers in the NPSL because Zulu Royals was a team which represented the Zulu Nation from the Royal Kraal and that it has a support base more than the clubs that were recommended.[1]

In 1971 Zulu Royals replaced African Wanderers and went on to finish 6th on the log and were voted club of the year. The following year in 1972 the club won the N.P.S.L league title securing 44 points from 26 matches and only losing 2 games.[1]

In 1973 Zulu Royal suffered a huge set back when the then manager Mr. Bethwell Masondo left the club and took with him several prominent players which split the club. After this unfortunate incident the club went into a mid-season slump that would see them not being able to successful defend their league title. In 1974, the running of the club was taken over by the supporters and in the same year, the team changed to AmaZulu Football Club, a term which simple means "Zulu people." Some supporters led by Mr. Francis Dlamini who managed the reserve team decided to part ways with the reserve team to Bhekizulu hall and renamed back Zulu Royals United and its nickname were esikotshi".[1] Other Directors that followed were Mr, Manana and Mr. Nxumalo who bought the team for R 4000.00, Mr. Merikan Madlala from Lamontville, then followed a committee made of Mr. Ngongoma, Mr. Duma, Mr. Mathe, Mr. Dlamini, Mr. Biyela and Nhleko.

The formation of the NSL and name changes (1985–2002)

[edit]

In 1985 the National Soccer League was formed and AmaZulu entered a new phase of their history under the leadership of Mr. David Dlamini.[1] In 1987, Clive Barker coached AmaZulu FC to finals of mainstay Cup and Iwisa Charity Cup, where they were narrowly defeated twice by Kaizer Chiefs. In 1990 the club reached the Bob Save Super Bowl final which they lost with a last minute goal against Jomo Cosmos, in 1992 the club won the inauguration Coca-Cola Cup and finished 3rd on the log in 1993.[1]

After Mr. Dlamini then followed Spar Natal, Mr. Ncanana, Mr. Dan Naidoo, Mr. Mike Segal, Mr. Dave King after him was Mr Sisa Bikisha in 2002, who then changed the name AmaZulu F.C. to Zulu Royal.[1] Amazulu were a British reggae/ska/pop band from the 1980s comprising five women and one man. They achieved success in the UK charts with four top-20 hits, the biggest being "Too Good to Be Forgotten" in 1986.[

Sokhela ownership (2005–2020)

[edit]
Logo from 2009 to 2025

In 2005, Dr Patrick Sokhela bought the team from Mr Sisa Bikisha, decided to revive the once mighty outfit of the Zulus by renaming the team back to AmaZulu Football Club. He and immediately bought the Premiership status ofDynamos to return the club to the top flight.[1] To commemorate the club's 80th anniversary in 2012 AmaZulu played a friendly against English giantsManchester United on 18 July 2012 losing by a solitary goal scored byFederico Macheda.

AmaZulu was relegated in the2014–15 season. After a failure to be promoted in the2016–17 season they rejoined the Premiership by purchasing Thanda Royal Zulu's Premiership Status.[2]

After purchasing their Premiership status, the team finished 7th in the 2017–18 season,[3] however they were stripped of the Top 8 finish when Ajax Cape Town fielded Tendai Ndoro in matches against Platinum Stars, Polokwane City & Supersport United. This resulted in Ajax Cape Town losing all three matches 3–0 & fined R50 000 on each offence,[4] and AmaZulu dropping to 9th position in the 2017–18 season.[5]

On 28 September 2018 it was announced by the PSL that AmaZulu would be docked 6 points for failure to comply with a ruling made by theCourt of Arbitration for Sport in September 2017.[6] The matter surrounded the illegal termination of the contract of a former player, Phinheas Nambandi, in 2014[7] Nambandi took the club to FIFA to contest the termination of his contract, with FIFA ruling that the termination was illegal and that the club were to pay an amount of R1‚086,000.00. AmaZulu appealed the decision at the Court of Arbitration for Sport, however, the decision was upheld. A year later the club had still failed to pay the outstanding figure to Phinheas Nambandi, this resulted in FIFA's Disciplinary Committee ruling that should the club not settle the debt with the player by 16 September 2018, 6 points would be deducted.[8][9]

The club had a turbulent 2019–20 season, with two coaches being fired and the club's Premiership status secured by the coaching combination of Ayanda Dlamini and Moeneeb Josephs.[10] AmaZulu started the season poorly under Cavin Johnson and his assistant Alan Clark, with the team sitting on 2 points after 5 games. The decision was made by club management to fire the coaching duo, with Jozef Vukusic coming in as the club's new head coach.[11][12][13] The team seemed to have turned a corner under Vukusic's mentorship, however, they started the second half of the season poorly and it was decided that change was needed in order to save the club from relegation. Vukusic was suspended, with assistant coach Ayanda Dlamini being given the role as interim head coach, and Moeneeb Josephs being installed as his assistant.[14][15] Dlamini managed to save the club from relegation, with the team finishing 13th, and going undefeated in his 5 home games in charge. What made this achievement even more impressive is that the AmaZulu ownership had implemented salary cuts on all their staff, which they cited as being associated with the COVID-19 pandemic – this despite the fact that the club continued to receive its full monthly grant from the PSL.[16][17] The club received backlash for the manner in which the salary cuts were handled from the SA Football Players' Union.[18][19][20]

The Zungu era (2020–present)

[edit]

On 2 October 2020, it was announced that businessmanSandile Zungu had purchased AmaZulu from Patrick Sokhela.[21] From the outset, the new ownership laid out a 12-year plan that would see the club climb in stock and standing within South African football.[22] As part of achieving this plan, Zungu brought inBenni McCarthy as Head Coach, with Siyabonga Nomvethe and McCarthy's former assistant from Cape Town City, Vasili Manousakis joining the club as assistant coaches[23][24][25][26] – this saw the redeployment of Ayanda Dlamini to the club youth structures[27] and the mutual termination of Allan Freese's contract.[28][29] Further to this, Moeneeb Josephs was brought in as the new first team goalkeeper coach, replacing long term employee Davies Phiri; and, Justin Hamburger was brought in to join the Performance Analysis department alongside Pilela Maposa.[30]

In his maiden season as the owner of AmaZulu, Sandile Zungu saw his team finish 2nd behind Mamelodi Sundowns and subsequently qualify for the 1st preliminary round of the CAF Champions League. The team beat Nyasa Big Bullets in the preliminary round with a 3-2 aggregate. AmaZulu progressed to the 2nd preliminary round facing African giants, TP Mazembe, with AmaZulu qualifying for the group stages of the competition after a 1-1 aggregate, going through on away goals. AmaZulu are the seventh team from South Africa to progress beyond the preliminary stages of Africa's showpiece club competition.[31]

The club introduced a new logo in October 2025.[32]

Facilities

[edit]

The club currently train and have their administrative offices at Moses Mabhida Stadium. The technical team have their offices based inside Prime Human Performance Institute. The club also utilizes the performance facilities at Prime.[33]

The club plays their home games out ofMoses Mabhida Stadium, which is based inDurban.

Tertiary Institution Cooperation

[edit]

The High-Performance Manager of AmaZulu, Joshua Smith, played a key role in the formation of an externship program with theUniversity of KwaZulu-Natal Biokinetics, Sports and Leisure Science department in 2019. The link sees biokinetics and exercise science honours students from the university assist with AmaZulu youth training sessions and physical testing.[34] The link between the two organisations enters its 4th year in 2022.

Further to their link with UKZN, it was announced on 15 December 2020 by AmaZulu's High-Performance Manager, Joshua Smith, that a formal link between Usuthu and the International Soccer Science and Performance Federation (ISSPF) had been finalized, with the ISSPF becoming the official educational partner of the team.[35][36]

Current squad

[edit]
As of 16 August 2025[37]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer
1GK RSAOlwethu Mzimela
4DF NAMRiaan Hanamub
5DF RSAKeegan Allan
6MF RSASiyanda Hlangabeza
8MF RSABen Motshwari
9FW RSARyan Moon
11FW RSAAndiswa Sithole
12DF RSATaariq Fielies
14DF RSANkosikhona Radebe
15DF RSAMondli Mbanjwa
No.Pos.NationPlayer
16GK RSADarren Johnson
20MF RSATebogo Mashigo
22MF RSABayanda Thabede
23FW ZIMThandolwenkosi Ngwenya
25DF RSAWandile Dube
27MF RSAHendrick Ekstein
34MF RSABongani Zungu
35DF RSAAsanda Mzobe
36DF RSAMinenhle Ngcobo
42DF RSASandile Mthethwa

Players on loan

[edit]

Note: Flags indicate national team as defined underFIFA eligibility rules; some limited exceptions apply. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.

No.Pos.NationPlayer

Personnel

[edit]

Head coach history

[edit]
As of 17 Dec 2023[38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45]
NameDate AppointedDate DismissedTime in officeMatchesPoints per match
Pablo Franco MartinSpain[46][47]20 June 20231 October 2024---
Ayanda DlaminiSouth Africa (Interim)04 Apr 20231 June 202358 Days60,83
Romain FolzFrance09 Oct 202204 Apr 2023177 Days191,11
Brandon TruterSouth Africa28 Mar 202206 Oct 2022193 Days181,56
Benni McCarthySouth Africa14 Dec 202025 March 2022466 Days601,52
Allan Freese (Interim)South Africa7 Dec 202017 Dec 202011 Days10
Ayanda DlaminiSouth Africa4 Mar 20207 Dec 2020275 Days131,23
Jozef VukušičSlovakia17 Sept 20193 Mar 2020168 Days200,90
Cavin JohnsonSouth Africa8 Aug 201716 Sept 2019769 Days711,17
Joey AntipasZimbabwe1 Jul 20168 Aug 2017403 Days
Delron BuckleySouth Africa (Interim)18 Apr 201630 Jun 201673 Days
Steve BarkerSouth Africa23 Nov 201418 Apr 2016512 Days
Wilfred MugeyiZimbabwe (Interim)15 Oct 201422 Nov 201438 Days50,20
Craig RossleeSouth Africa29 Nov 201215 Oct 2014685 Days571,25
Roger PalmgrenSweden19 Sep 201126 Nov 2012434 Days411,24
Manqoba MngqithiSouth Africa1 Jul 201019 Sep 2011445 Days360,89
Neil ToveySouth Africa1 Jul 200928 Jun 2010362 Days331,27
Clive BarkerSouth Africa1 Jul 200730 Jun 2009730 Days591,27
Júlio César LealBrazil31 Jan 200730 Jun 2007150 Days
Reggie ShelembeSouth Africa (Interim)30 Nov 200630 Jan 200761 Days71,00
Clive BarkerSouth Africa1 Jul 200629 Nov 2006151 Days100,6
Thabo DladlaSouth Africa2005
Keagan MumbaZambia20042004
Walter RautmannAustria2003
Zipho DlangalalaSouth Africa & Thabo DladlaSouth Africa (Interim)20032003
Joseph MukebaDemocratic Republic of the Congo20032003
Ramadhan NsanzurwimoBurundi20032003
Neil ToveySouth Africa20012002
Eddie LewisEngland19992000
Gavin LaneSouth Africa (Interim)19991999
Clive BarkerSouth Africa19971999
Eoin HandRepublic of Ireland19931993
Clive BarkerSouth Africa19911993
Clive BarkerSouth Africa19861987
Clive BarkerSouth Africa19741976

Club honours

[edit]

League

[edit]

National Professional Soccer League (first tier)

  • Champions: 1972

First Division Coastal Stream (second tier)

Cups

[edit]

MTN 8

Telkom Knockout

  • Winners: 1992

Nedbank Cup

Minor cups

[edit]
  • KwaZulu-Natal Premier's Cup:
  • The Msunduzi Cup

Club records

[edit]

League record

[edit]

NPSL

[edit]

NSL

[edit]

Premiership

[edit]

National First Division

[edit]

Premiership

[edit]

National First Division

[edit]

Premiership

[edit]

National First Division

[edit]

Premiership

[edit]

National First Division

[edit]

Premiership

[edit]

CAF Champions League

[edit]
  • 2021/2022 - Qualified for group stages.

Cup record

[edit]

MTN 8

[edit]
SeasonRoundOppositionScore
2022/2023FinalOrlando Pirates F.C.0:1
2021/2022Quarter-FinalsCape Town City F.C.1:2
2012/2013Quarter-FinalsMoroka Swallows F.C.0:2
2009/2010Semi-FinalsLamontville Golden Arrows F.C.1:4 (over two legs)

Carling Knockout Cup

[edit]
SeasonRoundOppositionScore
2023/2024Semi-FinalsTS Galaxy F.C.2:3

Carling Black Label Cup

[edit]
SeasonRoundOppositionScore
2022/2023Semi-FinalsMamelodi Sundowns F.C.0:3

Telkom Knockout

[edit]
SeasonRoundOppositionScore
2019/2020First roundMamelodi Sundowns F.C.0:5
2018/2019Quarter-FinalsOrlando Pirates F.C.1:3 (AET)
2017/2018First roundKaizer Chiefs F.C.0:3
2014/2015Quarter-FinalsMamelodi Sundowns F.C.1:2 (AET)
2013/2014First roundFree State Stars F.C.0:2
2012/2013Quarter-FinalsMamelodi Sundowns F.C.0:2
2011/2012First roundBidvest Wits F.C.0:1
2010/2011First roundKaizer Chiefs F.C.0:2
2009/2010Semi-FinalsAjax Cape Town F.C.0:2
2008/2009First roundSuperSport United F.C.0:1
2008/2009Quarter-FinalsBloemfontein Celtic F.C.0:1

Nedbank Cup

[edit]
SeasonRoundOppositionScore
2023/2024Quarter-FinalOrlando Pirates F.C.2:4
2022/2023Round of 16Dondol Stars4:5 (Penalty shootout)
2021/2022Round of 32Orlando Pirates F.C.0:1
2020/2021Round of 16Black Leopards F.C.0:1
2019/2020Round of 32Bloemfontein Celtic F.C.1:4
2018/2019Round of 32Highlands Park F.C.1:3 (Penalty shootout)
2017/2018Round of 16Ubuntu2:3
2016/2017Round of 32Platinum Stars F.C.2:3
2015/2016Round of 32Jomo Cosmos F.C.3:4 (Penalty shootout)
2014/2015Round of 32Lamontville Golden Arrows F.C.1:2
2013/2014Round of 16Bidvest Wits F.C.1:4
2012/2013Round of 32Tembu Royals F.C.1:2
2011/2012Semi-FinalsSuperSport United F.C.0:3
2010/2011Quarter-FinalsMpumalanga Black Aces F.C.2:3
2009/2010FinalBidvest Wits F.C.0:3
2008/2009Round of 32Black Leopards F.C.0:1
2007/2008Semi-FinalsMamelodi Sundowns F.C.0:1

Shirt sponsor and kit manufacturer

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcdefghijkl"The Club".AmaZulu FC. Archived fromthe original on 9 January 2019. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  2. ^"The PSL have approved AmaZulu's purchase of Thanda Royal Zulu's top-flight status".KickOff. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  3. ^"AmaZulu book Top 8 place as Cape Town City crumble | IOL".iol.co.za. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  4. ^"Ajax relegated after paying steep price for Ndoro eligibility debacle".TimesLIVE. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  5. ^Sport24, Baden Gillion- (16 May 2018)."Johnson: Ajax ruling complete shock to AmaZulu".Sport. Retrieved27 September 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^"PSL Confirm Points Deduction From AmaZulu".South African soccer news. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  7. ^"AmaZulu found guilty, docked six points | Goal.com".
  8. ^"AmaZulu docked six points' to one point' for ignoring Fifa".TimesLIVE. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  9. ^"AmaZulu found guilty, docked six points | Goal.com".goal.com. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  10. ^"Ayanda Dlamini hails Moeneeb Josephs presence at AmaZulu".Kick Off. 15 August 2020.
  11. ^"Cavin Johnson sacked at AmaZulu".Kick Off. 16 September 2019.
  12. ^"Johnson becomes second coaching casualty of Monday after he's sacked by AmaZulu".TimesLIVE.
  13. ^"Jozef Vukusic named Amazulu's new boss".iol.co.za.
  14. ^"AMAZULU SUSPEND VUKUSIC".DailySun.
  15. ^"Vukusic placed on special leave, assistants to take over at AmaZulu".iol.co.za.
  16. ^"AmaZulu confirm salary cuts in response to Covid-19 pandemic".iol.co.za. Retrieved28 January 2021.
  17. ^"AmaZulu Confirm Salary Cuts".Soccer Laduma. 21 April 2020. Retrieved28 January 2021.
  18. ^Sibembe, Yanga (22 April 2020)."SOCCER: Players' union and AmaZulu set to meet over salary cuts".Daily Maverick. Retrieved28 January 2021.
  19. ^"Some AmaZulu players oppose pay cut".SowetanLIVE. Retrieved28 January 2021.
  20. ^"We want to talk to the club – Safpu president Gaoshubelwe confirms AmaZulu FC's salary cuts | Goal.com".goal.com. Retrieved28 January 2021.
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  23. ^FARPost (3 January 2021)."BREAKING NEWS: Mbazo joins Cape Town City".FARPost. Retrieved28 January 2021.
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  30. ^"Ex-Orlando Pirates duo Josephs and Nomvethe to reunite with McCarthy at AmaZulu FC - Reports | Goal.com".www.goal.com.
  31. ^"AmaZulu join South Africa's elite after CAF Champions League group".
  32. ^Msomi, Smiso (30 October 2025)."AmaZulu unveil new logo as Zungu celebrates milestone ownership".IOL. Retrieved31 October 2025.
  33. ^"Prime Human Performance Institute".Moses Mabhida Stadium. Retrieved27 September 2019.
  34. ^"UKZN NdabaOnline". Retrieved28 October 2020.
  35. ^@josh_smith_RSA (15 December 2020)."Delighted to see this partnership..." (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
  36. ^"AmaZulu FC – ISSPF Learning Hub".learn.isspf.com. Retrieved28 January 2021.
  37. ^"South Africa - AmaZulu FC - Results, fixtures, squad, statistics, photos, videos and news - Soccerway".
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  42. ^"All aboard the coaches carousel - The Mail & Guardian". 23 October 2003. Archived fromthe original on 10 January 2019. Retrieved10 January 2019.
  43. ^"Zulu Royals' fans run amok". 6 Sep 2005
  44. ^"Confirmed: Benni Returns To The Dugout".Soccer Laduma. 14 December 2020.
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  63. ^"South Africa 2009/10".RSSSF. Retrieved1 October 2019.
  64. ^"South Africa 2010/11".RSSSF. Retrieved1 October 2019.
  65. ^"South Africa 2011/12".RSSSF. Retrieved1 October 2019.
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  67. ^"South Africa 2014/15".RSSSF. Retrieved1 October 2019.
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  69. ^"South Africa 2016/17".www.rsssf.org. Retrieved23 January 2025.
  70. ^"Alleged Thanda Royal Zulu sale an insult to football".ECR. Retrieved24 January 2025.
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  73. ^"AmaZulu general manager Lunga Sokhela explains how the club attracts sponsors".KickOff. 20 July 2018. Retrieved1 October 2019.
  74. ^"SPAR – Sports – getting actively involved in SA sport". Retrieved28 October 2020.
  75. ^"AmaZulu pen new sponsorship deal with Umbro".KickOff. 16 April 2018. Retrieved1 October 2019.

External links

[edit]
AmaZulu F.C. – current squad
International
National
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