THEY were dancing in the stands in Pallekele, and you can be sure they were dancing in the bars and maybe even the streets in Harare, Bulawayo, Mutare and Masvingo.
There is no other way to celebrate Zimbabwe’s progress to the Super Eight at the T20 Cricket World Cup than with the whole body.
The joy should not be limited to words or war cries alone, though there’ll be plenty of those too.
Zimbabwe’s cricket fans have made an entire songbook of catchy tunes, and they’ll be belting them out non-stop.
What their team has achieved in Sri Lanka is stuff no one dreamed of, especially after what they have been through over the last eight years of lean.
Missing out on the 2019 and 2023 ODI World Cups was one thing, but being the only Full Member not to participate in an expanded 20-team T20 World Cup in 2024 was nothing sort of embarrassing.
Some saw it as the death knell for a game that had been on life support for two decades.
Zimbabwe don’t have answers to all this – and may not for several years – but they are masters in the art of surviv-al.
In the grand southern African tradition of planning, cricket has stayed alive, and in fact, grown to the point where it is unrecognisable from the game it was when the Zimbabwe cricket team supposedly enjoyed their golden period in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
What often gets overlooked in that nostalgia is that that Zimbabwe team, good as it was, represented a small, elite minority (read: white) and cricket was never the people’s game.
It was only after an aggressive transformation policy, which resulted in a white-player walkout, a self-imposed ex-ile from Test cricket for the team, and the forcing of change in a way that their neighbours South Africa never dared to do, that cricket in Zimbabwe started to look Zimbabwean.
And by definition, that means imperfect.
There are still massive problems in the Zimbabwean game – and a recent example came at the underperformances and debates around selection at the Under-19 World Cup – but for now, those can be shelved because this Zimba-bwe men’s team have done the unthinkable.
Beating Oman was expected, beating Australia was not, and it set the tone for Zimbabwe to have their best finish in a T20 World Cup.
They have already punched so far above expectations that their fists are puncturing clouds, and fittingly, their ad-vancement came thanks to rain. In Africa, that is a blessing. It’s also the name of Zimbabwe’s superstar.
In Blessing Muzarabani and Brian Bennett, Zimbabwe have two pillars for the future that they can stand a team on, and they also have a good core around those two.
Some of them, like Sikandar Raza, Brendan Taylor and Graeme Cremer, are playing what will almost certainly be their last T20 World Cups, but they are contributing in ways that matter.
Raza is one of the game’s best allrounders and a hot commodity in franchise leagues. Taylor, out of the tourna-ment but staying on as a mentor, has an inspirational story of his own after serving an ICC ban and being rehabili-tated from drug and alcohol abuse, and proves that real, significant change is possible.
Cremer has done what few Zimbabwean (and few) men do and allowed his career to take a back seat to his wife’s.
Others have injury worries, like Richard Ngarava, who has battled a back problem, to become Zimbabwe’s newest Test captain.
And the rest, like Tadiwanashe Marumani, Ryan Burl, Tony Munyonga and Brad Evans are at various stages of mak-ing names for themselves.
Theirs is not a galaxy of stars but a constellation that finally has a recognisable pattern.
It cannot go amiss that their coaching structure under Justin Sammons, who is humble and hard-working, and sup-ported by Charl Langeveldt and Stuart Matsikenyeri, has helped.
As has obtaining a string of fixtures that included 10 Tests last year. Zimbabwe lost eight of those, but they learned and the lessons are showing.
They’ve always known, as a people and sports team, how to stay in a fight and now they know how to win too.
More importantly, they’ve latched on to the contagion of success that has seen their rugby team advance to the World Cup for the first time since 1991, and their most decorated Olympian, Kirsty Coventry, become the head of the International Olympic Committee.
Africa’s greatest ambassadors – think Didier Drogba and Mohammad Salah – are their sportspeople and Zimba-bwe’s cricketers can join that cast. That’s not an exaggeration.
This Zimbabwean team will be heroes at home and abroad and they deserve it. This moment is theirs. — ESPNcricinfo



