Steve Bartram
Monday 20 May 2024 17:20 Share With email Copy Link "Get Oprah on the phone. We're going on Oprah next."
As recording wrapped on Big Dreams, Limitless Belief last week, Quinton Fortune knew that he and Benni McCarthy had given us something special. In little more than half an hour, the close friends and former Bafana Bafana team-mates had explained how they both reached the peak of club football despite having, as Benni termed it: "Zero percent chance of getting out of there." 'There' is the Cape Flats, a near-lawless area of Cape Town, South Africa where life is more perpetually endangered than almost anywhere else on the planet. During their interview, both Benni and Quinny shared unbelievable tales of their upbringing in the Flats, where even the school run is set to a backdrop of gangsterism, unfolding in a permanent territorial war. Everyone has a journey to Old Trafford. Few - if any - can rival theirs in terms of overcoming sheer adversity.
From Cape Town to Carrington Gallery Go behind the scenes of our upcoming interview with Benni and Quinny, two South African Reds.
This isn't a ghoulish retrospective of how the pair broke free from South Africa's ghetto life; it's a celebration of their strength of humanity and their determination to fashion a life from dreams. If, as Benni said, the odds of leaving the Flats to make it as a footballer in Europe were nil, then what would statisticians have made of 2004's Champions League encounter between Porto and United in Estadio do Dragao, where two Flats escapees scored all three goals?
Lost amidst the infamy of events in the return leg at Old Trafford, where Porto survived an early onslaught (and an errantly-disallowed Paul Scholes goal) to progress, launching Jose Mourinho into Special One status, that first leg was a victory for another nation in another continent. Though the Champions League is European football's baby, South Africa rejoiced as one that evening, eschewing sides in favour of celebrating their sons' journeys.
Twenty years have passed since Fortune and McCarthy scored the goals, as Porto and United met in the Champions League.
By the time they retired and crossed the touchline - Benni as part of Erik ten Hag's coaching staff, Quinny most recently coaching at Mexico's Deportivo Guadalajara - both men were among the most successful South African footballers in history. Today, they are living proof of an alternative route in a world which seemingly offered only the short march to death. Both are immovably proud of their lives so far. They are family men and, while they will forever shield their own children from the horrors they experienced, they will share the lessons which arose.
A big interview with our South African Reds, Benni and Quinny, will drop on Wednesday.
In making Big Dreams, Limitless Belief, they were gracious and generous enough to share some of those experiences. In a final cut lasting little more than 20 minutes, there are tales to chill the blood and warm the soul. This is a bigger story than football. As both former players concluded at the end of the interview, their story is proof that anyone, anywhere can do anything.
Maybe even make it onto Oprah.
Fans can watch our feature-length interview, 'Big Dreams, Limitless Belief', from Wednesday.
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Steve Bartram
Monday 20 May 2024 17:20 Share With email Copy Link Back to Top
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