April Phumo
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Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Date of birth | 1937 | ||
Place of birth | Johannesburg, South Africa | ||
Date of death | 27 November 2011 (aged 74) | ||
Place of death | Bloemfontein, South Africa | ||
International career | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
South Africa | |||
Managerial career | |||
1979–1995 | Lesotho | ||
Arsenal (Maseru) | |||
Bloemfontein Celtic | |||
2001–2002 | Ria Stars | ||
South Africa U20 | |||
South Africa U23 | |||
South Africa women | |||
2004 | South Africa | ||
Nathi Lions | |||
2009 | United FC | ||
2011 | Atlie |
April "Styles" Phumo (1937 – 27 November 2011) was a South African football player and coach. He was nicknamed "Styles."[1]
Contents
Early life
April Phumo was born in Johannesburg,[2] in 1937.[1]
Playing career
He was a squad member of the South African national team prior to the 1966 FIFA World Cup; the team was banned from competing due to apartheid.[2]
Coaching career
Club sides
Phumo managed Arsenal (Maseru) of Lesotho, leading them to "several league titles and an unexpected place in the last 16 of the African Champions Cup in 1990."[2] He later managed South African club sides Ria Stars, Bloemfontein Celtic, Nathi Lions and Atlie.[3][4][5]
Phumo spent a brief spell as manager of United FC during 2009, helping the club gain promotion to South Africa's National First Division.[6]
National sides
Phumo was the first ever manager of the Lesotho national team.[7] Phumo began coaching Lesotho in 1979 and received a FIFA coaching diploma in 1981.[8][9]
Phumo was involved with the South African men's senior team for a number of years. He was assistant to Trott Moloto and the 2000 African Cup of Nations,[10] before a spell with Ria Stars.
In July 2002, Phumo returned as national team assistant to Ephraim Mashaba.[11] When Mashaba was sacked in January 2004, Phumo became temporary manager, taking control of the national team at the 2004 African Cup of Nations.[12] Phumo also managed the South African men's under-20, men's under-23 and women's senior national teams.[7]
Death
Phumo died of cancer on 27 November 2011, aged 74, at a hospital in Bloemfontein.[4]
References
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- No local image but image on Wikidata
- 1937 births
- 2011 deaths
- South Africa national soccer managers
- South African soccer managers
- Cancer deaths in South Africa
- Sportspeople from Johannesburg
- South African expatriates in Lesotho
- Expatriate football managers in Lesotho
- Lesotho national football team managers
- Lesotho people stubs
- Southern African football biography stubs
- Lesotho sport stubs
- South African soccer biography stubs