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Home Sport

More Than a Game: How Grassroots Sport Is Quietly Rebuilding Communities Across the Western Cape

in Features, Lifestyle
Reading Time: 4 min
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On dusty soccer fields, crowded netball courts, community halls and school grounds across the Western Cape, something far bigger than sport is unfolding every single day.

A volunteer coach keeps teenagers off dangerous streets after school.
A chess mentor teaches discipline and patience to children navigating difficult environments.
A local rugby organiser creates structure where instability once existed.
A dance instructor helps young people discover confidence, identity and belonging.

These moments rarely make headlines.
Yet for countless communities, they are life-changing.

Now, ahead of Mandela Day 2026, Liberty Promenade Mall is launching a new initiative designed to place those everyday heroes firmly in the spotlight.

Through its “The Power of Sport” campaign, the centre is calling on the public to nominate the coaches, mentors, volunteers and grassroots sports organisations using sport to transform lives across the province.

And in many ways, the campaign arrives at exactly the right moment.

Why Grassroots Sport Matters More Than Ever

South Africa has always shared a deep emotional connection with sport.

It unites communities across difference.
It creates moments of collective pride.
It teaches resilience, discipline and teamwork.
And perhaps most importantly, at grassroots level, it often creates safe spaces where young people can simply belong.

For many communities facing unemployment, social instability and limited recreational opportunities, local sports programmes become far more than extracurricular activities.

They become support systems.

A football field becomes a sanctuary.
A netball team becomes a family.
A coach becomes a mentor.
A training session becomes structure, routine and hope.

This is the reality Liberty Promenade’s campaign seeks to recognise.

From soccer clubs and athletics programmes to chess groups, dance organisations, tennis initiatives, rugby teams and community fitness projects, the campaign focuses on the people whose impact stretches far beyond the scoreboard.

Celebrating the Unsung Heroes of Community Sport

The initiative builds on previous Mandela Day community-focused campaigns hosted by the centre, but this year’s focus carries a particularly emotional resonance.

Rather than celebrating celebrity athletes or elite competition, “The Power of Sport” shines a light on ordinary individuals doing extraordinary work at community level.

The volunteers opening facilities after hours.
The mentors buying equipment out of their own pockets.
The organisers creating opportunities for children who may otherwise have nowhere to go.

These are the people quietly helping build:

  • safer neighbourhoods,
  • stronger support networks,
  • healthier lifestyles,
  • and more hopeful futures for young South Africans.

According to Brenda Bibby, the campaign is about recognising the deeper social role sport continues to play within communities.

“Sport has an incredible ability to bring people together and create positive change in communities,” Bibby said.

“Through this campaign, we want to recognise the organisations dedicating their time and energy to uplifting young people and creating opportunities through sport.”

“These are the local champions helping build confidence, leadership and connection every single day.”

Mandela Day and the Spirit of Community Action

The timing of the initiative is significant.

Mandela Day has long served as a reminder that meaningful change often begins through ordinary acts of service carried out consistently over time.

Grassroots sport embodies that principle perfectly.

Its impact is rarely instant.
It unfolds gradually:
one training session,
one conversation,
one child,
one opportunity at a time.

And while professional sport often captures public attention, community sport frequently delivers some of society’s most important social outcomes quietly in the background.

Reduced youth vulnerability.
Improved school participation.
Stronger community cohesion.
Safer spaces for children.
Positive mentorship structures.
And pathways toward leadership and self-belief.

The “The Power of Sport” campaign recognises that these contributions deserve visibility too.

A Platform for Stories That Often Go Untold

As part of the initiative, shortlisted nominees will feature in a special Mandela Day exhibition hosted inside the mall later this year.

The exhibition will showcase:

  • striking portraits,
  • team journeys,
  • community stories,
  • and local achievements

highlighting how grassroots sport continues changing lives throughout the Western Cape.

Importantly, the campaign also offers tangible support.

One selected sports organisation or initiative will receive support of up to R20,000 to assist with:

  • equipment,
  • facilities,
  • programme development,
  • or operational growth.

For many small community organisations operating with limited resources, that support could make a meaningful difference.

How the Public Can Participate

Community members are encouraged to nominate deserving organisations, teams, mentors, coaches and youth development programmes making a positive impact in their areas.

Nominations remain open until 29 May 2026.

A verification process will be conducted to confirm the authenticity of all submissions before finalists are selected.

The campaign reminds South Africans of something powerful:
nation-building does not happen only in parliament, boardrooms or stadiums filled with thousands of fans.

Sometimes it happens quietly on a local field where a volunteer coach decides to show up again tomorrow.

And often, that is where the real transformation begins.

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