There was a time when Lesotho football was the butt of jokes in southern Africa. Not anymore.
Thanks to the stunning performance by our national team at the COSAFA tournament held in Durban, South Africa, last month.
Likuena were only a few milimetres away from lifting the regional trophy before they were beaten by a much more experienced Zambian side. There was no shame in losing to Zambia who have lifted the trophy a record nine times.
With that great performance, the Likuena players are beginning to reap the rewards with a few likely to be snatched by South African clubs.
This week, the Lesotho Football Association (LEFA) decided to hand over the entire M250 000 kitty to the players and technical team who did the nation proud.
That is to be commended.
While the money might appear small, we hope and pray that it serves as motivation for the players as to what else in possible when they exert themselves to the national cause.
With LEFA rewarding the players and technical team for their efforts, we still sense that the football authorities in Lesotho feel badly let down by a government that seems not to see any value in investing in sport, particularly football.
Advocate Salemane Phafane bluntly told the media this week that as LEFA, “they are on their own” with no visible support structures put in place by the government.
There was a feeling that politicians were in a stampede to host football matches as a gimmick to attract votes in the run-up to last year’s elections. But with the elections now over, politicians were back on their default mode.
That withering assessment might be true. And we can understand why Advocate Phafane appeared miffed by what he says is the lack of support from the government.
If Likuena are to rise as a powerhouse in southern Africa and on the continent, it is clear that the government will need to play its part in fully funding football.
But that is only one part of the solution.
The Ministry of Sports will need to craft a new policy that puts sport, and football in particular, at the centre of development. We will need to go back to the basics.
The government through the Ministry of Sports will need to build our football from the bottom in schools. That means setting up a proper functional league for high school football.
At national level, we will need to see a functional junior league. That way, we will be able not only to identify talent but nurture it as well.
All this will need money. We also understand why sport could be starved of resources in a country where there are other competing demands.
The argument is that why plough resources into sport when our health delivery system is in the intensive care unit? When the majority of our people are going to bed hungry? When our schools are battling for resources?
The reason is that sport, including football, can be a vehicle for social cohesion. Just look at the euphoric scenes when Likuena was playing well at the COSAFA tournament. We dared to dream as a nation.
But beyond the feel-good factor, football has become a multi-million maloti industry. We can all attest to the transformative power of football when it takes kids from the streets, giving them a chance to dream.
While we understand that the government is pressed for resources, all what the people are asking for is that it does the basic things right so that sport can be accorded its rightful place in society.