Why Malawi Queens have fallen from grace in world netball prowess?

The Malawi Queens’ 2025 Africa Netball Cup campaign has left many fans searching for answers after the team finished in fourth position, a result that falls far below the nation’s proud netball standards.

Once a dominant force on the continent, Malawi now finds itself trailing behind familiar rivals such as Uganda, South Africa and Zimbabwe, whose performances remain consistently stronger.

One of the major factors believed to be contributing to the Queens’ decline is the lack of continuous technical development for coaches.

Malawi Queens

While Malawi boasts some of the most experienced netball coaches in the region, experience alone is no longer enough in modern netball.

The game has evolved and without regular refresher courses, international exposure and modern tactical training, even seasoned coaches risk falling behind.

Another critical issue lies within the Netball Association of Malawi (NAM) itself. There are growing concerns that internal divisions within the association are affecting planning, unity and progress.

An association that is not fully functional or united struggles to provide clear direction, strong leadership and long-term technical strategies for the national team.

Ironically, these struggles are happening at a time when Malawi now has a National Netball League, something that did not exist in the past.

Historically, the Queens were at their strongest even without a formal league structure.

This raises serious questions about whether the league is being effectively utilised to develop talent, identify players and prepare athletes for international competition.

On the continental stage, the gap between Malawi and its rivals appears to be widening.

Uganda, South Africa and Zimbabwe continue to invest heavily in structured player development, sports science and high performance systems.

Their steady growth contrasts sharply with Malawi’s declining competitiveness, as seen in the Queens’ low performance levels during the 2025 tournament.

The fourth place finish was not just about losing matches, it reflected deeper systemic problems.

Poor execution, lack of tactical sharpness and inconsistent performances pointed to preparation issues that go beyond what happens on the court. These are signs of structural weaknesses rather than isolated mistakes.

For many netball followers, the current situation is frustrating because the talent is still there.

Malawi continues to produce gifted players but talent without proper systems, unity and technical support cannot deliver consistent success at the highest level.

This weekend mirror serves as a reminder that success in modern sport demands more than passion and history.

It requires strong governance, continuous learning, unity within associations and strategic investment in both coaches and players.

If NAM fails to address its internal divisions and prioritise technical growth, Malawi risks slipping further down the African netball ladder.

The Queens’ past glory should be a foundation to rebuild from not a comfort zone to hide in.

As the dust settles on the 2025 Africa Netball Cup, the message is clear,reflection must lead to action.

Without urgent reforms and renewed focus, the Malawi Queens may continue to struggle while their rivals surge ahead.

The weekend calls for honest conversations, bold decisions and a shared vision because the Queens’ crown will not return by hope alone, but through deliberate change.


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How Chakwera politicised development to woo votes for failed September 16 polls

…..Projects at various stages of being completion we are hardly unveiled to the public not because they were ready for use but because the political moment demanded visibility…..

According to local media, the period leading up to national elections in Malawi has increasingly blurred the line between genuine development work and political performance.

Public infrastructure, instead of following disciplined technical schedules, has often been pulled into the orbit of campaign strategy.

Projects at various stages of incompletion have been hurriedly unveiled to the public, not because they were ready for use, but because the political moment demanded visibility.

In many instances, several projects were “officially opened” within a single day, creating an impression of extraordinary productivity.

What mattered most in these moments was not whether a road was durable, a school functional, or a health centre fully equipped.

What mattered was the image of action.

Commissioning ceremonies became tools of persuasion, designed to signal delivery rather than demonstrate lasting value.

The assumption underpinning this approach was that voters respond more readily to what they can see than to what they can sustainably use.

Yet beneath the spectacle lies a series of consequences that only surface long after election posters have come down.

Projects launched before completion are often victims of rushed execution.

Design elements are simplified, timelines compressed, and quality assurance postponed or ignored altogether.

Contractors operating under political pressure may prioritize speed over standards, knowing that the most critical inspection is not technical, but ceremonial.

Engineers and oversight institutions, constrained by directives from above, may find themselves endorsing stages of work that would normally require further testing.

On commissioning day, the structures may look complete.

Within months, cracks appear, systems malfunction, and users begin to experience the real cost of premature celebration.

Maintenance budgets are strained earlier than planned.

The useful life of infrastructure assets is reduced without ever being openly acknowledged.

In extreme cases, rehabilitation becomes unavoidable, effectively turning one project into two expenditures.

This culture also reshapes how public money is allocated.

Resources are diverted from essential but invisible components such as drainage systems, safety installations, and long-term maintenance frameworks.

Instead, funds flow toward elements that make a project look complete enough for a public launch.

Projects that cannot be easily showcased are postponed or quietly deprioritized.

Development planning loses its coherence, becoming responsive to political timelines rather than technical logic or national need.

Within this environment, the five-lane K57 billion Lilongwe bridge presents a striking contrast.

Unlike many smaller projects, it resisted being pulled into the rhythm of campaign-driven commissioning.

Its sheer size and engineering complexity made symbolic completion impractical.

A bridge of that scale cannot be half-finished without creating obvious and dangerous risks.

Structural integrity, load-bearing capacity, and system integration are not features that can be convincingly staged.

In this case, engineering realities set firm limits on political manoeuvring.

The project also attracted intense scrutiny from professionals, the media, and the wider public.

Any attempt to rush or misrepresent its readiness would have been immediately exposed.

The political consequences of failure would have been severe, both in terms of safety and credibility.

As a result, the space for theatrics was significantly reduced.

This contrast exposes a deeper truth about governance and infrastructure delivery.

Where institutions are fragile and projects are modest or scattered, political influence can easily override technical judgment.

Where projects are large, complex, and highly visible, professional standards and public attention can act as a substitute for formal accountability.

The broader habit of favouring appearance over substance carries long-term political risks.

While frequent project launches may initially impress, repeated encounters with incomplete or failing infrastructure erode public trust.

Citizens become sceptical of official announcements and cynical about government promises.

For civil servants and technical professionals, this environment is deeply discouraging.

Expertise is sidelined in favour of performance.

Long-term planning is sacrificed to short-term political gain.

From an economic perspective, the costs are substantial.

Rushed construction, frequent variations, and post-election repairs inflate overall expenditure.

Development partners and investors observe these patterns closely.

Political interference is factored into risk assessments, often translating into higher costs or reduced confidence.

The lesson from the Lilongwe bridge is therefore not simply about one project that avoided premature celebration.

It is a reminder that meaningful development requires protection from electoral pressures.

Until infrastructure delivery is insulated from campaign imperatives, quality will remain negotiable.

And until that separation is achieved, Malawians will continue to pay more for projects that deliver less.

In the end, progress is not measured by the number of ceremonies held before an election.

It is measured by whether infrastructure still serves its purpose long after the votes have been counted.


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