Thomas_Madigage

Thomas Madigage

Thomas Madigage

South African soccer player and coach


Thomas Madigage (11 November 1970 – 19 October 2012) was a South African football player and coach.

Quick Facts Personal information, Date of birth ...

Club career

Born in Pretoria, Madigage started his career at Arcadia Shepherds where he played alongside Paul Matthews, the son of Roy Matthews, assistant at Jomo Cosmos. After impressing Matthews, he was spotted by Jomo Sono who brought the player to his own team,[2] raising him as a son.[3]

He made his debut for Jomo Cosmos at the age of 16,[4] winning the 1987 National Soccer League in his first year at the club. In 1990, he had a trial at Rangers[5] with fellow Cosmos player Augustine Makalakalane, but the duo was not signed. Instead, both joined Swiss side FC Zürich.

At Zürich, Madigage suffered with knee injuries and played a single league match[6] in a 5-1 loss against FC Luzern, scoring his sole team goal.[7] After failing to appear in further matches, he returned to Jomo Cosmos in 1992.[8]

He later joined Pretoria City (later renamed SuperSport United), winning the 2nd division and reaching the Bob Save Super Bowl in 1995,[9] before retiring in 2003.

International career

Madigage earned four caps for the South African national team.

Retirement

After retiring as a player, Madigage worked as an assistant coach for SuperSport United from 2004 to 2012[10] and later the South African national team.[8]

Later life and death

Madigage died in a car crash in the early hours of Friday 19 October 2012, after hitting a donkey crossing a road near Burgersfort, Limpopo. He was 41 at the time.[8][11]


References

  1. Hlahla, Patrick; Ramphekwa, Hosea; Naik, Sameer (20 October 2012). "SA mourns soccer legend". IOL. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  2. "Madigage's passing rocks SA". Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  3. "dbFCZ | Thomas Madigage". www.dbfcz.ch (in German). Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  4. "dbFCZ | Spiel – 15.09.1990". www.dbfcz.ch (in German). Retrieved 5 June 2018.
  5. "South Africa 1995". RSSSF. Retrieved 5 June 2018.

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