For Ghana, this was not just revenge for the 2-0 defeat to
South Africa in the group stage, but also a repeat of their bronze medal feat
in 2016—again against Banyana Banyana.
South Africa struck first through Nonhlanhla Mthandi just
before the break. Her crisp right-footed strike from outside the box in the 45th
minute gave Banyana the lead and capped a dominant first-half performance.
A defensive mix-up saw goalkeeper Andile Dlamini credited
with an own goal after deflecting a blocked header from Alice Kusi into her own
net.
Both sides had chances to win it late in regulation time.
Ghana’s Evelyn Badu hit the crossbar deep into stoppage time, while South
Africa’s Linda Motlhalo forced Cynthia Konlan into a smart save minutes
earlier.
With the scores level at full-time, the match headed to
penalties with the Black Queens won 4 – 3.
For South Africa, the result will sting. Desiree Ellis’s
side, crowned champions in 2022, had hoped to add a consolation medal to their
cabinet. Instead, they return home needing to rebuild with younger players
likely to take centre stage in the next cycle.
As the final whistle blew on a tense evening in Casablanca,
it was Ghana’s players and staff who danced with joy, pride restored, and
revenge sweetly served.
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