Tokyo Olympics: Zambia’s Copper Queens out to shine despite dented preparations

When you are preparing to make your Olympic debut against women’s football heavyweights and European champions, smooth preparations would help – but Zambia’s Copper Queens have had anything but. The team upset all odds to become Africa’s sole representative in Tokyo, defeating 2019 Women’s World Cup qualifiers Cameroon in the play-off to take the sought-after …

Tokyo Olympics: Zambia’s Copper Queens out to shine despite dented preparations
When you are preparing to make your Olympic debut against women’s football heavyweights and European champions, smooth preparations would help – but Zambia’s Copper Queens have had anything but. The team upset all odds to become Africa’s sole representative in Tokyo, defeating 2019 Women’s World Cup qualifiers Cameroon in the play-off to take the sought-after slot above even the might of Africa’s record nine-time champions Nigeria. Zambia have run headlong into a wall of challenges since their memorable qualification in March 2020, and the fact they have played only one friendly since can be blamed on the vast obstacle presented by the ongoing coronavirus pandemic. Nonetheless, the pre-tournament difficulties have done little to dampen enthusiasm, as team captain Barbra Banda – a forward who has also boxed professionally in the past – makes clear. “It is so amazing and everyone is excited to represent the country – not just Zambia, but Africa at large,” she told BBC Sport Africa. “It is a sign that women’s football in Zambia is going somewhere and we are improving each and every time. “We are so happy as a team to represent the continent. It feels great because we worked so hard for it. I know we have a good team.” That sole friendly – an impressive 2-1 victory against a Chilean side playing on home soil – came in December 2020, with a scheduled second game abruptly cancelled after several of the Zambia squad tested positive for Covid-19. Cancelled tours In February, the Copper Queens were then set to test themselves against strong opposition at an eight-team international tournament in Turkey only for more positive Covid tests in the squad to force their withdrawal prior to departure. Their final roll of the dice was a tour to England in June, with a match against Great Britain the highlight, but once again coronavirus – or, more specifically, the travel restrictions it enforces – crushed those plans. Zambia captain Barbra Banda is excited to play at the Tokyo OlympicsIt leaves a team that defied the odds to just make it to the Olympic having to face two-time silver medallists Brazil, China (1996 runners-up) and European champions the Netherlands with only an intensive three-month training camp in Zambia to fall back on. “The ideal situation would have been to test ourselves against strong teams,” lamented Zambia FA media liaison officer Sydney Mungala. “Obviously, you can’t substitute that level of competition with anything we have (in Zambia).” Yet Banda, who finished top scorer in the China Women’s Super League last year, is unfazed by the might of Group F. “I feel great because I always want to compete with the best, so I just have to go and prove myself there,” she rallied. “It’s a tough group but we are not looking at the names of the teams – we are going there with our own aim and Zambians are expecting a lot from us.”