MASERU – Kick4Life’s management say they are close to reaching an agreement with potential buyers of their Vodacom Premier League status.
The club would not reveal the identity of the buyers but Makoanyane Letsie, a member of the club’s executive, said they are hopeful the sale will be completed by next week.
The news come after Kick4Life announced two weeks ago that they would be dropping their senior men’s team to focus on their women and development sides.
Besides financial reasons, the club said their decision was influenced by changes that have been made in the United States to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) which now block any player that has played in Lesotho’s men’s premier league from playing college football.
Kick4Life is a registered charity and social enterprise with offices in Lesotho, the United Kingdom and the USA. Part of the club’s football model centres on them getting talented young players into the US college system.
Several players have made the move from Kick4Life to the US through college soccer scholarships and the latest was Keketso Lipholo who enrolled at William Jewell College, Missouri in 2021.
The change in NCAA rules only prohibits players from Lesotho’s premier league, players from the lower leagues would still be eligible to move to the US.
“We are selling our status but not the name, the name Kick4Life will remain, we are just selling our Premier League status,” Letsie said.
“To run the team in these two seasons has cost close to (one) million because we played two seasons as one,” he added.
Letsie said the financial figures of playing in the Vodacom Premier League do not add up.
“We finished ninth, for example. What are we going to get (as prize money for finishing ninth)? I think M70 000 and I spend a million. How am I making profit? I am not,” Letsie said.
“There is no Top 8 (tournament next season). We were told by the Premier League that we are not going to get money anywhere else, so whoever says (Kick4Life) are making profit is just talking,” he continued.
Kick4Life will now compete in the B-Division and the club will meet with their players who still have contracts to figure out a way forward.
Letsie said Kick4Life have been shocked to see other top-flight clubs approaching their players freely even though they are still under contract. He said no clubs have officially approached them over potential transfers.
Letsie, however, admitted Kick4Life are expecting a large exodus of players as the club drops down to the third tier of local football.
“The players can go, it depends on the player, but I don’t want to hide that when you have played in the Premier League it’s not easy to play in a lower division, so the expectation is that the majority will say we want to go to other teams,” he conceded.
“We have about 10 players whose contracts are ending now, but we also have those who are still contracted and we will speak individually with them,” Letsie added.
Kick4Life’s men’s team was founded in 2008 and the women’s side followed a year later. The men’s team won promotion to Lesotho’s premiership in 2014 after winning the A-Division Northern Stream and it has maintained its top-flight status since.
The club’s men’s football operations will now focus on developing young players until the Under-23 age level while competing in the lower leagues which are permitted as stepping stones by the
NCAA in the US. The move will ensure Kick4Life’s most talented players are not restricted in achieving their potential in both football and academics.
Tlalane Phahla