Athletics (track and field) :
Major events: Comrades Marathon and Two Oceans Marathon South Africa has an active athletics schedule and has produced numerous athletes who compete internationally and qualify for the Olympic and Paralympic Games. At the
2011 World Championships in Athletics in
Daegu, South Korea, the relay team of
Shane Victor,
Ofentse Mogawane,
Willem de Beer and
Oscar Pistorius set a national record time of 2:59.21 seconds in the heats. South Africa went on to win a silver medal in the finals with the team of Victor, Mogawane, de Beer, and
L. J. van Zyl. In 2012,
Caster Semenya won a gold medal in the women's 800m of the
2012 Olympic Games in London, with a time of 1:57.23 seconds. In 2012, Oscar Pistorius became the first double-amputee sprinter to compete at the
Olympic Games, but did not win a medal. Pistorius won a gold medal and a bronze medal in the
T44 class at the
2004 Summer Paralympics in Athens, and three gold medals at the
2008 Summer Paralympic Games in Beijing. He also won two gold medals at the
2012 Paralympic Games and remained the
T43 world record holder for the 200 and 400 metres events. The South African team of Pistorius,
Arnu Fourie,
Zivan Smith, and
Samkelo Radebe won a gold medal and set a Paralympic record in the 4 × 100 m relay with a time of 41.78 seconds. Fourie also set a world record in the heats of the T44 200m event and won a bronze medal in the 100m event. In 2016,
Wayde van Niekerk won a gold medal in the men's 400m of the
2016 Olympic Games in Rio. He also broke the
world record at the same race with a time of 43.03 seconds. He also holds the world-best time in the
300 metres.
Boxing , circa 1920s As of March 2012, when
Jeffrey Mathebula won the
IBF junior featherweight title, South Africa had produced 71 world champions since
Willie Smith won the British version of the world bantamweight title. As of July 8, 2022, South Africa has produced 130 world champions. In addition to the universally recognised world champion
Vic Toweel, the number contains champions recognised by the major and nonmajor sanctioning bodies, and 71 world champions have won one hundred and fourteen titles including thirty-five titles for the four major sanctioning bodies (
WBA,
WBC, IBO, IBF and
WBO). The
Gauteng sports department has been cooperative, but sponsorship and television coverage significantly dropped in thirty years. and only a few cards had been aired on the satellite pay-TV platform
SuperSport. "We support the muted multi-lateral agreement involving the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC), SuperSport and the BSA on broadcasting rights," Sports Minister
Fikile Mbalula stated in March 2013. However, after
Simpiwe Vetyeka won the world title in December of that year,
Bongani Mwelase told that Vetyeka came home to receive an "ice-cold welcome" from the local media. "Nothing is motivating if you really look at how boxing is treated here," he said.
Hekkie Budler has held world championships in two weight classes, including the World Boxing Association (WBA) and International Boxing Organization (IBO) minimumweight titles between 2011 and 2016, and the unified WBA (Super), International Boxing Federation (IBF), and Ring magazine light-flyweight titles in 2018.
Sivenathi Nontshinga is a two-time
IBF light-flyweight champion and is ranked as the fifth best light-flyweight in the world.
Cycling :
Major events: Cape Argus Cycle Race and 94.7 Cycle Challenge South Africa has a strong cycle race scene. The most notable cyclist is
Robert Hunter, who won a stage in the
2007 Tour de France. Robert Hunter rode that tour with
Team Barloworld, who had gained a wildcard entry to the Tour de France that year. Barloworld was a UK-registered team with a management team composed mainly of Italians and a South African sponsor, and it included several African riders. In 2015, it was announced that the South African
MTN-Qhubeka squad would become the first African-registered team to compete at the Tour. The team made an impact at the tour, with
Daniel Teklehaimanot spending several days in the
polka dot jersey and
Steve Cummings winning the fourteenth stage of the race on
Mandela Day. The team, under the new name of , was granted a
UCI WorldTeam licence in 2016, becoming the first African team in the sport's top division. In the
2016 Tour de France the team won five stages through Cummings and
Mark Cavendish, the latter also wearing the yellow jersey.
Cycling South Africa or CyclingSA is the national governing body of
cycling in South Africa. Another South African,
Greg Minnaar, is a 4-time downhill mountain bike world champion in 2003, 2012, 2013, and 2021, with his win in 2021 making him the oldest ever world champion in downhill history at the age of 39. 2 On top of this, he has 4 second places and 3 third places in the world championships. At the
2013 Tour de France,
Daryl Impey became the first African cyclist to wear the
yellow jersey as race leader, which he held for two stages.
Louis Meintjes took the best overall result for an African rider at a Grand Tour when he finished 10th at the
2015 Vuelta a España, before he finished in the top 10 in the
2016 Tour de France, another first for an African rider.
Horseriding South Africa hosts the Saddle Seat World Cup every four years, which includes the
American Saddlebred,
Morgan horse, and South African
Boerperd horse breeds. It is the highest level of competition for
Saddle seat Equitation riders.
Golf South Africa is one of the major
golfing nations. The first South African to win a
major championship was
Bobby Locke, who won
The British Open four times in 1949, 1950, 1952, and 1957. Also, he claimed nine wins at the
South African Open, seven at the
South Africa Professional, and 11 at the Transvaal Open, for a total of 74 professional wins. The most famous South African golfer is, however,
Gary Player, who, along with
Arnold Palmer and
Jack Nicklaus, dominated world golf for much of the 1960s and 1970s. Player won all four majors, winning the
British Open in 1959, 1968 and 1974,
The Masters in 1961, 1974 and 1978, the
PGA Championship in 1962 and 1972 and the
U.S Open just once in 1965. Player always wore his trademark black outfits and became one of the sport's most recognisable figures. He also enjoyed considerable success in senior golf, winning six
majors on the
Champions Tour (then the Senior PGA Tour) from 1986 to 1990. The only other South African to have won a senior major is
Simon Hobday, winner of the
U.S. Senior Open in 1994. Current players who have won majors are
1994,
1997 U.S. Open and
2002 British Open Champion
Ernie Els,
2001 and
2004 U.S. Open Champion
Retief Goosen,
2008 Masters Champion
Trevor Immelman,
British Open Champion
Louis Oosthuizen and
2011 Masters Champion
Charl Schwartzel. Other notable players include Tim Clark, who has two Nationwide Tour wins and won the 2010 PGA Players Championship. The country has had less success in women's golf. The only South African woman to have won a
major was
Sally Little, who won the
LPGA Championship in 1980. Little later became a U.S. citizen and won a second major, the 1988
du Maurier Classic, as an American. The
Sunshine Tour is based in South Africa but has a few events in other African countries. Several tournaments have been sanctioned by the
European Tour since the 1990s: •
South African PGA Championship (1995–1999) •
FNB Players Championship (1996) •
Dimension Data Pro-Am (1996–1997) •
South African Open (1997–present) •
Alfred Dunhill Championship (1990–present) •
Joburg Open (2007–present) •
Africa Open (2010–present) •
Nelson Mandela Championship (2012–2013) •
Volvo Golf Champions (2012–2014) •
Tshwane Open (2013–present) •
Nedbank Golf Challenge (2013–present) Also, the
South African Women's Open was part of the
Ladies European Tour from 2012 to 2014. South Africa has hosted the
2003 Presidents Cup and the
Women's World Cup of Golf from 2005 to 2008.
Mixed martial arts South Africa host
Extreme Fighting Championship (formerly known as EFC Africa). It is the number 1
mixed martial arts organisation in the African continent.
EFC Africa 01 took place at The
Coca-Cola Dome in Northgate, Johannesburg, on 10 November 2009 and is now available for viewing in 110 countries, including the United States, Canada, the
Caribbean and across Europe. EFC Africa 19, which was held at Carnival City in Johannesburg on 19 April 2013, topped other African sports ratings with a record of over 1.8 million views with 31.3% of the total South African TV audience (
SABC,
e.tv and
DStv combined). These are the biggest ratings in EFC history, topping EFC Africa 12's record of 1.6 million views and 25.9% audience share. On 19 June 2004,
Cape Town's
Trevor Prangley made his
UFC debut. He defeated Curtis Stout by submission via cobra choke in round 2 at
UFC 48. His last fight in the UFC was against
Chael Sonnen, whom he had previously submitted by armbar in round 1 before they both entered the UFC. Sonnen defeated him by unanimous decision at
UFC Ultimate Fight Night 4. His record in the UFC was 2-2. United Kingdom-based South African fighter Fraser Opie competed on
The Ultimate Fighter: Team Jones vs. Team Sonnen, season 17 of the UFC's
reality television show. He lost to
Clint Hester in the preliminary round via unanimous decision. Fraser signed with EFC after competing on the show. He beat Egypt's Mohamad Ali via TKO in round 1 on his EFC debut at EFC 22, then lost to then-defending champion Gideon Drotshie for the EFC Light Heavyweight Title via TKO in round 2 at EFC 25, and then lost to Tumelo Maphutha via submission from punches in round 1 at EFC 27. Opie was scheduled to fight Pete Motaung at EFC 34 but was removed from the card due to a dispute over travel arrangements, according to Opie, and was replaced by former opponent Tumelo Maphutha. While EFC appears to have refused a previously agreed direct flight for Fraser, the agreement seems to have fallen through, with EFC offering only indirect flights with a connecting flight that would increase the overall travel time, which Opie suggested is not possible due to his demanding weight cut. As a result, Fraser Opie was cut from EFC. In February 2014, EFC Heavyweight Champion
Ruan Potts signed with the UFC. He fought
Soa Palelei at
UFC Fight Night 40 at
U.S. Bank Arena in
Cincinnati,
Ohio on 10 May 2014 on his UFC debut. He lost via first-round KO. His next fight was at
UFC 177 Prelims on 30 August 2014 at The
Sleep Train Arena in
Sacramento,
California against
Anthony Hamilton. He lost in round 2 via TKO due to continuous body shots. In December 2014, the UFC signed EFC Middleweight Champion Garreth McLellan. He made his debut on 11 April 2015 at UFC Fight Night: Gonzaga vs Cro Cop 2 in
Kraków, Poland. He was initially scheduled to fight Poland's
Krzysztof Jotko. Jotko pulled out of the fight. He fought another Polishman, Bartosz Fabinski. He lost via unanimous decision (30-27, 30-27, 30-27). At
UFC Fight Night: Holohan vs. Smolka in
Dublin, Ireland, on 24 October 2015, McLellan earned his first UFC win against Bubba Bush. McLellan finished Bush with a second to go via TKO in round 3. In January 2015, EFC President Cairo Howarth announced the opening of the EFC Women's Flyweight Division. The first EFC women's fight took place at EFC 37 on 21 February at Carnival City in Johannesburg. Johannesburg's own Danella Eliasov fought Hungary's Zita Varju. Eliasov won via TKO in round 1. Their first Women's Flyweight Champion was crowned at EFC 60 when Amanda Lino defeated Jaqualine Trosse in a rematch by armbar in round 2. The Inaugural title fight was scheduled for EFC 54 between Amanda Lino and Shana Power, but Shana couldn't make weight and was not medically cleared to compete. Jaqualine Trosse and Shana Power fought at EFC 56. Trosse won the fight by unanimous decision and was awarded the bout against Lino for the vacant title at EFC 60, which she lost. EFC Flyweight Champion, Nkazimulo Zulu, competed in
The Ultimate Fighter: Tournament of Champions. The winner was set to fight
Demetrious Johnson for the
UFC Flyweight Championship. He fought Japan's Hiromasa Ogikubo in the first round of the tournament. He lost via
submission due to a
rear-naked choke in round 2. UFC signed fighter
Dricus du Plessis is the current middleweight champion, having won all 8 of his fights in the division. Another South African,
Cameron Saaiman, has won 3 of his UFC bantamweight fights, losing one by decision and another by TKO.
Motorsports South Africa has hosted the
Formula One Grand Prix, the most recent being the 1993 race at the
Kyalami circuit. It has produced the
1979 Formula One world champion,
Jody Schekter, who triumphed for Ferrari that year. South Africa was also one of the host nations for the
A1 Grand Prix. Former
IndyCar Series driver and son of Jody,
Tomas Scheckter, led the most laps in both his first two Indianapolis 500 starts. Which was 85 laps during the
2002 Indianapolis 500 and 63 laps during the
2003 Indianapolis 500. He has two career IndyCar victories. He has driven full-time for
Cheever Racing in 2002,
Chip Ganassi Racing in 2003,
Panther Racing in 2004 and 2005 and
Vision Racing in 2006 and 2007. He also drove for
Luczo Dragon Racing,
Dreyer & Reinbold Racing, and other teams part-time until 2011. Motor
rallying and off-road (4x4) racing are also widely popular and practiced in South Africa. The 2009
Dakar Rally was won by South African
Giniel de Villiers in a Volkswagen Touareg. Brothers
Brad Binder and
Darryn Binder are well-known competitors in
Grand Prix motorcycle racing.
Swimming :
Major events: Midmar Mile The aQuelle Ocean Racing Series is Africa's largest beach event with a 400m ocean swim, 1 km, 2 km, and 3 km Ocean Swims available on mostly alternate Sunday mornings throughout Summer in Nelson Mandela Bay (Port Elizabeth) and hosted by local non-profit sports events company Zsports Events NPC. The Nelson Mandela Bay River Mile (river mile) is Africa's oldest open-water swimming event, having started in 1924, and is held annually in Nelson Mandela Bay in mid-February.
Tennis South African players won the
1974 Davis Cup, albeit only by default, as India refused to travel to South Africa to compete in the final because of the apartheid regime. South Africa was banned from the competition in 1979 and did not re-enter until 1995.
Johan Kriek won the Australian Open final in 1981 (South Africa's only Grand Slam victory to date), before becoming a US citizen in 1982.
Kevin Curren reached the Australian Open final in 1984, losing to
Mats Wilander, before naturalising as a US citizen in 1985. Other South African Grand Slam finalists include
Brian Norton (1921),
Irene Bowder Peacock (1927),
Eric Sturgess (1947, 1948 & 1951),
Ian Vermaak (1959),
Sandra Reynolds (1960),
Cliff Drysdale (1965) and
Kevin Anderson (2017, 2018). The most recent tennis players to enter the world top ten rankings are
Wayne Ferreira,
Amanda Coetzer, and
Kevin Anderson. The
South African Open was part of the Grand Prix from 1972 to 1989 and the ATP Tour from 1990 to 2011. ==Other individual sports==