Posted in News on Jun 12, 2005.
An early second-half goal from veteran midfielder John Maduka
raised hopes of a shock win for the Malawi Flames in the Group C
final before Mbesuma came to the rescue.
He created and scored the equaliser with seven minutes left at
Woodlands Stadium in the Zambian capital, releasing Clifford
Mulenga down the flank and pouncing on the cross to rifle the ball
over goalkeeper Swadick Sanudi.
And two minutes from fulltime Mbesuma mesmerised several
defenders inside the penalty area leading to a handball and he sent
Sanudi the wrong way with a penalty kick into the right corner.
Mbesuma was also on target twice in the semifinals 24 hours
earlier as Zambia romped to a 3-0 victory over Swaziland while
Malawi came from behind to triumph 2-1 against Lesotho.
Zambia join Group A winners South Africa, Group B winners
Zimbabwe and defending champions Angola in the semifinals and
final over the weekend of August 13-14 at a venue to be announced.
Angola have won the annual southern Africa championship a record
three times, Zambia and Zimbabwe twice each and regional power
South Africa once since its launch eight years ago.
Zambia dominated the first half on a warm, clear, early winter
afternoon, but with Mbesuma well policed the best chances fell to
Christopher Katongo, who squandered two in quick succession.
The loudest cheer of the opening half was reserved for Zambia
goalkeeper Kennedy Mweene, who foiled Malawi striker Daniel
Chitsulo by controlling the ball with his chest before executing a
bicycle-kick clearance.
Maduka, wooed out of retirement by coach Yasin Osman to help
develop a young Malawi squad, broke the deadlock by finding space
between two defenders and leaving Mweene flat footed with a
glancing header off a Fisher Kondowe cross.
Mweene saved another Maduka header and Malawi appeared
comfortable until the late heroics of Mbesuma, who plays for
Johannesburg club Kaizer Chiefs and was voted South Africa
Footballer of the Year last month.
Zambia coach Kalusha Bwalya watched the match from the stand
after being given an indefinite touchline ban by world football
governing body Fifa while it probes his sending off during a World
Cup qualifier in Togo last weekend.