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PSG – Liverpool : un choc explosif pour une place en demi-finales

PSG – Liverpool : un choc explosif pour une place en demi-finales

Le football européen retient son souffle. Ce mercredi 8 avril 2026, le Paris Saint-Germain accueille Liverpool au Parc des Princes pour le quart de finale aller de la Ligue des champions. Une affiche XXL entre deux géants du continent, avec en ligne de mire une place dans le dernier carré. Une revanche européenne très attendue […]

L’article PSG – Liverpool : un choc explosif pour une place en demi-finales est apparu en premier sur Shoot Africa.

Wasim Maintains Lead After Round Two of Sunshine Development Tour Q-School

NAIROBI, Kenya, April 8, 2026 – Amateur golfer Ali Wasim maintained his position at the top of the leaderboard after round two of the Sunshine Development Tour – East Africa Swing Qualifying School at Limuru Country Club on Wednesday.

Wasim, who led after the opening round, returned a 1-over par 73 to move to 3-under par 141 total, enough to keep him narrowly ahead heading into the third round.

His round featured an early bogey on the par-5 3rd hole, but he recovered well with a birdie on the 9th to make the turn at level par.

On the back nine, he mixed a birdie on the 13th with bogeys on the 12th and 14th, managing his round to retain the outright lead.

Reflecting on his performance, Wasim said:

“It wasn’t my best round, but I’m happy I was able to stay in it. I made a few mistakes out there but also managed to recover at key moments. Over four rounds, that’s part of the game, so the focus now is to reset, stay patient and come back stronger tomorrow.”

Tanzania’s Isaac Wanyeche moved into second place at 1-under par 143 after carding a 2-under par 70, the best round of the day.

Building on a steady opening round, he delivered a composed performance that featured an early eagle on the par-4 2nd hole and a birdie on the 5th to make the turn at 3-under.

Tanzania’s Isaac Wanyeche in action at the Sunshine Development Tour Q-school.

He continued to press on the back nine with birdies on the 12th and 18th, although dropped shots on the 13th, 14th and 16th slightly slowed his momentum.

Nonetheless, his overall consistency saw him climb firmly into contention, heading into the final two rounds.

Speaking after his round, Wanyeche said:

“I’m pleased with how I played today. I worked on my short game today, which wasn’t as sharp in the first round, and my putting was much better. The back nine was a bit challenging as I dropped a few shots, but I was happy to recover with a birdie on the final hole to steady the round.”

He added: “Getting that early eagle definitely gave me confidence, but it can also be tricky because you don’t want to get ahead of yourself. I just stayed calm, stuck to my game plan, and focused on each shot rather than thinking about the eagle. Going into the next rounds, I’m not focused on leading. It’s like an exam, you don’t aim to top, you aim to improve. For me, it’s about staying calm, playing better than I did today, and seeing where that takes me.”

It was a tougher day for fellow round one co-leader William Odek, who carded 4-over par 76 to drop into a tie for third place at level par 144.

Despite picking up birdies on the 3rd and 18th, a series of bogeys on the 4th, 8th, 9th, 11th and 13th holes proved costly.

He is tied in third with John Karichu, who returned a solid 2-under par 70 to move up the leaderboard.

Karichu’s round included birdies on the 2nd, 3rd, 6th, 11th and 17th, with dropped shots on the 4th, 5th and 11th.

Amateurs Sujan Shah and Sammy Mulama are tied for fifth place at 3-over par 147, keeping themselves within reach as the competition heads into a decisive third round.

With just two rounds remaining, the battle for top positions continues to intensify, with players now needing consistency and composure to secure strong ranking positions and a place on the Sunshine Development Tour for the 2026/27 season.

The post Wasim Maintains Lead After Round Two of Sunshine Development Tour Q-School appeared first on Capital Sports.

Adam Brooke Sets His Sights on Making Netball South Africa Part of the Big Four

Adam Brooke did not plan to become the first man to lead Netball South Africa. He saw the position advertised on LinkedIn, applied on the strength of instinct, and was genuinely surprised when the call came. He was the last candidate interviewed that Friday afternoon, sitting across from president Mami Diale in what he describes as a warm, get-to-know-each-other conversation rather than a formal examination.

“Still didn’t hold up much expectation being a male in a female-dominated sport, but when the opportunity came it was an absolute no-brainer for me.”

Incoming Netball South Africa CEO, Adam Brooke

That candour is characteristic of the 49-year-old who officially took the reins as CEO of Netball South Africa on 1 March 2026, becoming the first man to hold the position in the federation’s history.

He brings more than two decades of experience across sports marketing, event management, sponsorship, operations and governance, with a career spanning the 2007 Tour de France, the 2010 FIFA World Cup on home soil, the 2012 Olympic Games, the Absa Cape Epic, and both Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates through the Vodacom sponsorship.

From the gsport Newsroom, February 2026

He is under no illusions about the scale of the task ahead. South Africa’s most widely participated women’s sport has the talent, the passion and the following, he says, but has not yet taken its place alongside rugby, cricket and football.

“Netball in South Africa is not where it should be. It should be along the likes of rugby, cricket, and football. Being the biggest female-participated sport in the country, there’s no reason why it shouldn’t be.”

His plan to change that rests on three pillars: commercialisation, on-court performance, and grassroots development. He is direct about which of the three presents the steepest climb. The federation is currently building netball courts across every province and working to relaunch grassroots club competitions. For Brooke, discovery requires movement. Coaches and selectors must go into communities, not wait for talent to arrive.

“It’s about getting competitions out into the communities. It’s about getting the coaches out into the communities. It’s about getting the selectors out there to be able to see the talent that is out there. So many South African sports people are talented and are never discovered. It’s now up to us to work out ways to bring them to the fore and give them the opportunity to be the best they can be.”

“Rugby found Makazole Mapimpi and countless Springboks who came from nowhere. Netball can do the same, if it is willing to go looking.”

On the commercial front, Brooke has already met all of the federation’s existing partners, including SPAR, Telkom, Hollywood Bets, Renault and Gilbert, reassuring those who had considered stepping back during a turbulent 18 months. One point of principle has defined his approach from the outset: he will not be calling them sponsors.

“I don’t actually want to use the word sponsors. I’d rather use the word ‘Partners’, because that’s what they are. In order for us to grow the sport, we need to work with partners.”

He cites a recent meeting with Renault as a clear illustration of his commercial philosophy. Their goal is selling vehicles. His question was simple: how can netball help them do that?

“These days, it’s no longer about just putting up a piece of branding on the side of the court. They’re looking for so much more. The return on investment is now integral to their decision-making.”

On the court, Brooke is setting ambitious but grounded targets. The SPAR Proteas carry medal ambitions into the Commonwealth Games, stated openly by head coach Jenny van Dyk. The 2027 Netball World Cup in Australia carries a top-four target. For 2029, he wants South Africa on the podium. He speaks about Jenny van Dyk with the kind of respect usually reserved for figures far beyond the sport.

“She reminds me a lot of Rassie Erasmus, to be quite honest.”

The pathway to that podium runs partly through South African players already competing in the world’s top leagues in the United Kingdom, Australia and Malaysia. Brooke wants that international experience brought home into the training environment, and into coaching conversations about what the world’s leading programmes are doing differently.

His leadership philosophy was shaped not in a boardroom but on the ground at the 2010 FIFA World Cup, under a mentor he cites with clear respect. [Please confirm the name Ron Delmont with Adam Brooke before publication.] The lesson passed on was deceptively simple.

“He just brought a calmness to the team. The learning of just keeping calm, slowing everything down, and taking everything one step at a time was a true learning for me.”

That lesson is being applied now. Brooke speaks of Mami Diale in terms that make clear the relationship is already load-bearing. They speak daily, and he draws deliberately and gratefully on her 23 years of netball knowledge. He has arranged individual conversations with every member of the executive, each of whom carries deep netball experience he does not yet have and openly acknowledges.

“I would like to bring my experience to the table and neutralise the experience of the rest of the team at Netball South Africa. There is no ‘I’ in team, and that is definitely how I work.”

As the first man appointed to lead Netball South Africa, Adam Brooke is focussed on developing grassroots talent as an immediate priority.
As the first man appointed to lead Netball South Africa, Adam Brooke is focussed on developing grassroots talent as an immediate priority.

Away from the office, Brooke runs. He is training for the Comrades Marathon, heading out every evening to clear his head after whatever the day has required.

“Every evening I go and get out on the road and it brings me back down to earth. I’m just a cog in the wheel of delivering to the sport. It’s not about me in the slightest. It’s about the sport of netball and what we can do for it.”

Asked what it means to him personally, as a man, to champion a women’s sport, his answer is direct and unmistakably South African in its instinct.

“I don’t see it as this is a female sport and a male sport. I drive around in a car branded as a Renault vehicle with Netball South Africa on it. And I’m proud to drive in that car because I’m part of a South African sporting federation. I’m not proud because I’m part of a women’s sport. I’m proud because I’m part of a South African sport.”

Why cannot netball do for this country what football did in 2010, or what rugby has done across its World Cup victories? Nelson Mandela understood it. Sport does not merely reflect a nation. It builds one.

“Nelson Mandela said it perfectly: sport unifies a country better than no other. And it unifies the youth better than no other. It doesn’t matter if it’s male or female. It’s South African.”

He closes with a call to action addressed directly to every South African who has ever watched netball from the stands or played it in the street.

“There’s no reason why rugby is filling a 65,000-seat stadium and netball is only filling a 25,000-seat stadium. If we can bring the teams, then we need South Africa’s support to get behind us. Come and support our teams and come and show the love.”


Main Photo Caption: Adam Brooke, the incoming Chief Executive Officer of Netball South Africa, brings more than 20 years of experience in sports management, marketing and governance to his historic new role at the federation. All Photos: Supplied

Photo 2 Caption: Adam Brooke sets ambitious targets for Netball SA, including a top-four finish at the 2027 Netball World Cup, and a medal at the 2029 tournament.

Photo 3 Caption: As the first man appointed to lead Netball South Africa, Adam Brooke is focussed on developing grassroots talent as an immediate priority.

The post Adam Brooke Sets His Sights on Making Netball South Africa Part of the Big Four appeared first on gsport4girls.

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