Dr Desiree Ellis To You: Cput To Confer An Honorary Doctorate To The Successful Banyana Coach

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dr desiree ellis to you cput to confer an honorary doctorate to the successful banyana coach

Four-time African Coach of the Year, Desiree Ellis, will add another accolade to her long list of achievements in honour of her contribution to women's football in the country.

The Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) will confer an honorary doctorate to the Banyana Banyana coach at the institution's graduation ceremony on Thursday.

CPUT announced in a statement that Ellis would receive the accolade because her 'significant achievements as a professional sportsperson and head coach of the South African women's football team, Banyana Banyana, has positioned her at the top of the African and global sport fraternity.'

Ellis is the most successful coach in the history of Banyana Banyana.

She led the team to their maiden Women's Africa Cup of Nations title in 2022 in Morocco. Under her leadership - since taking over the team in 2016 - Banyana qualified for back to back FIFA Women's World Cups.

They made their debut in the global showpiece in France in 2019, and returned to feature at the 2023 edition co-hosted by Australia and New Zealand. Ellis' Banyana made history Down Under, becoming the first South African senior national team to advance to the last 16 of the World Cup.

The team couldn't add to this by qualifying for the Olympics in Paris later this year, losing to arch-nemesis Nigeria in the last hurdle.

Ellis is a highly decorated coach who has been named as the best in women's football by the Confederation of African Football four times. She received the Coach of the Year accolade from the continent's governing body in 2018, 2019, 2022 and 2023.

President Cyril Ramaphosa also honoured the 61-year-old with the Order of Ikhamanga in Gold.

She has been an exemplary figure since beginning her career at the age of 30 in 1993.

Apartheid robbed her of her good years playing for her national team. But she refused to give up when the country was re-admitted to international football in 1992 - two years before South Africa became a democratic dispensation.

She earned more than 30 caps in her eight years as a Banyana player, including coaching them. In 2014, she was appointed assistant coach to Dutch coach Vera Pauw who helped take the team to the next level and qualify for the Games in Brazil.

Ellis took over from Pauw in 2016, first on an interim basis before the title was made permanent and she transformed the team - leading them to continental glory while the number of South African women's footballers plying their trade abroad drastically grew.