by Lorato | Mar 5, 2026 | All News, SMU Media, Student Media
No shortcuts. No silence. No excuses. That was the uncompromising message as Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University (SMU) staged its first-ever multi-disciplinary sports workshop at the SMU Sports Complex — a bold reset for student sport.
Under the theme “Play Smart, Play Safe, Play Clean”, the University convened leading voices in athlete development, safeguarding and anti-doping to confront the realities facing modern student-athletes. The objective was clear: raise standards, protect students and safeguard integrity.
The programme featured former Banyana Banyana captain and national coach Simphiwe Dludlu, South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (SASCOC) Chief Operating Officer Patience Shikwambana, and anti-doping specialist Loyiso Maqina.
Dludlu opened with a firm reminder that elite performance is engineered, not improvised. Drawing on the Long-Term Athlete Development model, she stressed that respecting each stage of physical and cognitive growth is non-negotiable. “If you are tired, your body cannot focus,” Dludlu told students, including chess players in attendance. “Chess needs a sound mind. If you are exhausted, you cannot perform.”
She challenged every attendee to commit to exercising at least twice a week, regardless of their sporting code. Physical conditioning, she argued, underpins both physical and mental performance. Third-year footballer Thembisile Nxumalo described the session as a wake-up call. “We always think talent will carry us,” she said. “Coach Dludlu made it clear that discipline carries you further.”
Shikwambana addressed safeguarding with urgency, defining it as the right of every athlete to participate free from harm, harassment or abuse. “Safety starts with you deciding that you will not tolerate being harmed,” she said. “If someone crosses a boundary once, you have a choice to walk away.” She urged students to recognise early warning signs and report concerns without fear. Safeguarding, she added, is both a personal responsibility and an institutional duty.
Third-year karateka Tshiamo Sefolo said the discussion resonated deeply. “We don’t often talk openly about abuse in sport,” she reflected. “Hearing that 93% of reported cases are genuine shocked me. It made me realise speaking up is not overreacting — it is protecting your future.”
Maqina concluded with a stark lesson on strict liability in anti-doping regulations: athletes are fully responsible for any prohibited substance found in their bodies, regardless of intent. “Is a four-year suspension harsh? Yes,” he said. “But the rules are clear.”
He warned against unverified supplements and reminded athletes that certain medications require a Therapeutic Use Exemption. Completion of the Anti-Doping Education and Learning (ADEL) e-learning certificate, he noted, is now mandatory for those aspiring to represent South Africa internationally. Final year rugby player Sanele Mhlongo admitted the session changed his perspective. “I didn’t realise how easy it is to fail a test accidentally. From now on, I will check everything.”
The workshop was organised by the SMU Sports Officer Busisiwe Sijora, who described it as a deliberate intervention rather than a ceremonial event. “We are building more than teams — we are building responsible athletes,” Sijora said. “If our students are to compete nationally and internationally, they must understand development, safeguarding and compliance. Excellence demands knowledge.”
SMU has drawn a line in the sand for student sport: train intelligently, protect yourself fiercely and compete with integrity. For those who attended, the message was unmistakable — performance without principle is failure. At SMU, both now move together.
By Rose Moreki
by Lorato | Nov 15, 2025 | All News, SMU Media, Student Media
Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University (SMU) has officially entered a defining new era as it inaugurated Dr Penny Moumakwa as Chancellor and Professor Tandi Matsha-Erasmus as Vice-Chancellor and Principal, marking the first time in the institution’s history that the apex leadership trio, including the Chairperson of Council, is led entirely by women.
This historic moment positions SMU not only as a university on the rise, but as an institution rewriting the narrative of leadership in South Africa’s higher education landscape.
A transformational milestone for higher education
In a ceremony that blended academic tradition with powerful symbolism, the installation of the Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor affirmed SMU’s commitment to excellence, transformation, and a renewed identity rooted in leadership, integrity, and societal purpose.
Chairperson of Council, Nontlaza Sizani, celebrated the milestone, noting that: “Today, we are witnessing an extraordinary moment for our country, one where women lead with intellect, courage, and clarity. This leadership collective will shape SMU’s future and strengthen its contribution to the nation.”
Upon taking the oath of office, Moumakwa delivered an acceptance address grounded in humility, purpose, and a commitment to service.
She noted: “I accept this honour with deep appreciation and a profound sense of duty. A Chancellor must represent the soul of the institution, its integrity, its aspirations, and its promise to society. I accept that responsibility with reverence, with clarity, and with unwavering commitment.” She also pledged her full support to the Vice-Chancellor, saying: “Professor Matsha-Erasmus, your leadership is already shaping a powerful new chapter for SMU. I look forward to walking alongside you as we strengthen this institution and expand its impact.”
Delivering her inaugural address, themed “The Ascent of SMU: A University Reimagined for Global Impact,” Matsha-Erasmus set out a bold, future-oriented vision for SMU’s next chapter. She emphasised: “There are moments in the life of a nation when an institution steps fully into its purpose. Today is such a moment for SMU. We will not ask for respect, we will earn it. Not by rhetoric, but by results.”
Referencing SMU’s recent rise in the 2026 Times Higher Education World University Rankings, she highlighted that the institution is becoming a continental hub for health sciences excellence, research leadership, and innovation.
The Vice-Chancellor continued: “We stand at an inflexion point, a moment to honour the history that shaped us and boldly define the future we will create. Our mission is not only to generate knowledge, but to heal, innovate, and impact global health.”
A university on the rise
In their respective addresses, both the Chancellor and Vice-Chancellor underscored SMU’s accelerating trajectory as a university on the rise — one positioning itself as a continental force in health sciences education, research, and innovation.
They highlighted how SMU is deepening its footprint in world-class research, evidenced by the groundbreaking patents emerging from its scholars and the increasing visibility of its scientific outputs. This momentum is matched by the university’s bold expansion of its One Health leadership, advancing interdisciplinary solutions in a world where human, animal, and environmental health are inseparably linked.
The leaders further emphasised SMU’s drive to strengthen innovation, commercialisation, and entrepreneurship, ensuring that research does not remain in academic journals but moves into clinics, communities, markets, and manufacturing ecosystems. They articulated a clear vision of SMU as a continental reference point for health sciences training, producing graduates who are globally competent and locally responsive.
Central to this rise is a renewed commitment to student-centred excellence, ensuring that student experience, wellbeing, and opportunity are embedded at the heart of institutional decision-making.
Both leaders also reaffirmed SMU’s responsibility to the country: contributing meaningfully to national health priorities, including the implementation of the National Health Insurance (NHI), universal health coverage, and the future architecture of South Africa’s healthcare delivery.
Together, these ambitions signal a university not only transforming itself but also reshaping the health landscape of South Africa, Africa, and the world.
A new epoch of leadership
This all-women leadership collective—Council Chair, Chancellor, and Vice-Chancellor- signals SMU’s entry into a new epoch of institutional renewal, ethical purpose, and academic ambition.
It is a milestone that not only embodies transformation but positions SMU as a university charting a bold path for South Africa and Africa.
*By Tshimangadzo Mphaphuli