For Nonkululeko Mlaba, cricket was a means to a better life but then she fell in love with it

South Africa’s leading wicket-taker in this World Cup talks about her early years in the game, and why she watches a lot of cricket these days

Firdose Moonda27-Oct-2025Many, if not most, elite sportspeople turn their passion into their profession but occasionally things work the other way. Nonkululeko Mlaba is an example of someone for whom cricket was a job first, and the joy came later.Mlaba grew up in the township of KwaMashu, north-west of Durban, in the province of Kwa-Zulu Natal on South Africa’s east coast. Like many of the areas the apartheid government demarcated for black Africans, KwaMashu was densely populated and severely under-resourced, and residents were deprived of access to good-quality housing, roads or sports facilities. Democracy arrived in 1994, and Mlaba, born in 2000, grew up with a certain level of hardship.As a child, she “didn’t even know there was a sport called cricket”, but once she was introduced to it, she got involved casually. She played at Lindelane Cricket Club in the neighbouring township of Ntuzuma, where she bowled pace until her coach, Sandile Caluza, turned her into a spinner.”I didn’t understand it at first and I was so mad,” Mlaba says, “but I started to enjoy it more because I didn’t have to run to bowl. I could just walk in and bowl.Related

  • Fast, accurate, relentless Nonkululeko Mlaba is determined to be No. 1

  • Maharaj and Mlaba win the big ones at CSA annual awards

  • Powerplay podcast: First impressions from the Women's T20 World Cup

  • The colours of the rainbow, so pretty in the South African sky

  • From 69 all out to statement win – South Africa restore World Cup credentials

“But it wasn’t easy. When I first started bowling spin, my fingers were sore. I felt like the webbing was going to split and it was really hard.”In her teens, Mlaba trained at one of Cricket South Africa’s hubs, development facilities established across the country to unearth talent outside the elite schooling system. The one Mlaba was at, the INK hub, which served Inanda, Ntuzuma and KwaMashu, is among the most successful. It was where offspinner Nondumiso Shangase, who is also part of the World Cup squad, and allrounder Andile Simelane, who has played nine T20Is for South Africa’s men’s side, emerged. The hub continues to do its job of talent-spotting, but the more pressing question is what comes next.Mlaba had just completed her schooling when the Kwa-Zulu Natal union expressed an interest in her making the step up to provincial cricket. Though KwaMashu is only 16kms from Kingsmead, the difficulties in using public transport and the dangers of travelling at certain times of the day meant she was unlikely to be able to devote as much time to training as she would have liked. The gap had to close.The board stepped in, and in partnership with corporate sponsors, funded an apartment for Mlaba and Shangase to live in in the upmarket suburb of Musgrave, and also provided them with a monthly stipend. Much closer to Kingsmead, their new base was convenient and secure. It was also a golden ticket to building a career, as they effectively now had jobs. If that hadn’t been offered to her, what else could Mlaba have done?”I don’t know,” she says. “At that phase of my life, there was pressure. I was out of school, I needed to try and get a job, provide for my family. For most people, you study and then you work. Cricket really helped us a lot. It helped us to not really focus on trying to do other things, and money they gave us, we gave to our families to buy groceries. Because you know with black tax…”

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by ICC (@icc)