Junior Starlets roar back to sink South Africa, seal FIFA U-17 World Cup ticket

Jacob Icia
By Jacob Icia July 12, 2026 05:10 (EAT)
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Junior Starlets roar back to sink South Africa, seal FIFA U-17 World Cup ticket

Junior Starlets players celebrate a goal during their second leg of the last round of 2026 World Cup qualifiers against South Africa at the Nairobi's Nyayo National Stadium, on July 12, 2026. Kenya won 3-1.

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Kenya's Junior Starlets produced a stirring second-half display to overturn an early setback and beat South Africa 3-1 at Nyayo Stadium, completing an emphatic 5-1 aggregate triumph to qualify for the 2026 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup in Morocco.

The victory sees Mildred Cheche's charges secure a place at the global showpiece for the second time, underlining the remarkable progress of Kenya's youth women's football programme.

Having made history by reaching the World Cup for the first time in 2024, the Junior Starlets have now confirmed that breakthrough was the start of a new era rather than a one-off achievement.

Kenya's journey to Morocco has been nothing short of impressive. The Starlets negotiated the qualification campaign with confidence, overcoming their opponents over two-legged ties before setting up a decisive final-round showdown with South Africa.

A commanding 2-0 first-leg victory away from home had already placed one foot at the World Cup, leaving them with the task of finishing the job in front of their home supporters.

Despite carrying that healthy advantage into the return fixture, Kenya were given an early scare.

South Africa made a dream start when Katleho Malebana found the back of the net after just five minutes, silencing the home crowd and reducing the aggregate deficit to 2-1. The visitors sensed an opportunity and piled on the pressure, forcing Kenya onto the back foot during a nervy opening spell.

The Junior Starlets searched patiently for a response but struggled to break down a determined South African defence before the interval. After two minutes of added time, the hosts headed into the dressing room trailing 1-0 on the night, although they still maintained a slender one-goal aggregate advantage.

Cheche's half-time team talk proved decisive.

Kenya returned after the restart with renewed purpose, pressing higher up the pitch, moving the ball with greater urgency and asking far tougher questions of the South African backline.

Their persistence finally paid off in the 71st minute when Gaudencia Maloba timed her run perfectly before calmly finishing to level the match at 1-1. The goal restored Kenya's two-goal aggregate cushion at 3-1 and shifted the momentum firmly in favour of the hosts.

As South Africa struggled to cope with Kenya's relentless intensity, Cheche made another inspired move from the bench by introducing Elizabeth Opiyo.

The substitute immediately injected pace and directness into Kenya's attack, stretching the visitors' defence and creating fresh problems. Her enterprise was rewarded late in the game when she burst into the penalty area and drew a foul, earning the Starlets a spot-kick.

Brenda Awuor showed remarkable composure from 12 yards, confidently dispatching the penalty to give Kenya a 2-1 lead on the night and extend the aggregate score to 4-1, sparking jubilant celebrations inside Nyayo Stadium.

There was still time for one final moment of brilliance.

Deep into the closing stages, Opiyo collected possession inside Kenya's own half before embarking on a sensational solo run. The forward glided past a succession of South African defenders with pace and skill before coolly finishing beyond the goalkeeper to cap a memorable performance with Kenya's third goal.

The final whistle confirmed a deserved 3-1 victory on the day and a commanding 5-1 aggregate success, sealing Kenya's place at the 2026 FIFA U-17 Women's World Cup in Morocco and writing another glorious chapter in the Junior Starlets' remarkable rise on the international stage.

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