#WrestleHammamet

Algeria, Egypt, and Tunisia Win Junior African Team Titles

By Eric Olanowski

HAMMAMET, Tunisia (March 28) – Three different nations won team titles at the junior African Championships in Hammamet, Tunisia. Algeria captured the freestyle title, Algeria won the Greco-Roman championship, and the host nation of Tunisia grabbed the women’s wrestling team title. 

In freestyle, Algeria had 150 points and narrowly edged Egypt who had 145 points. Algeria, who had six finalists and three champions, was able to sneak past Egypt, who had three winners but only five finalists. 

Tunisia finished third in freestyle with 139 points. 

In Greco-Roman, Egypt’s domination from the cadet tournament carried over to the junior portion of wrestling. They won seven cadet golds and followed that up with five junior titles while also grabbing four silvers. 

Tunisia, who had 187 points finished in second place, and Algeria, who had 125 points finished in third. 

In women’s wrestling, Tunisia, who closed out the competition with 207 points, grabbed the team title on the backs of seven gold medal performances.  Even more impressive, Tunisia more than doubled their closest competition, finishing 107 points ahead of second place Egypt (100 points), and 127 points ahead of Morocco, who ended in third. 

RESULTS 

#development

South Africa completes phase one of UWW DNSS Program

By United World Wrestling Press

PRETORIA, South Africa (November 17) --  The South African Wrestling Federation successfully completed the first phase of the United World Wrestling National Development and Support Strategy (DNSS) from October 17 to 26.

Under the supervision of Vincent AKA, UWW International Development Officer for Africa, and the coordination of Markus DEKKER, member of the SAWF Coaches Council, a nationwide development mission was undertaken. The UWW-SAWF team visited provincial associations, conducting technical assessments, talent identification sessions, and workshops for coaches.

South Africa

Using the UWW National Federation Assessment Tool (NFAT), the mission provided a detailed overview of the current state of wrestling in South Africa -- from grassroots participation to elite athlete preparation.

The tour covered major provinces including Western Cape, Eastern Province, Free State, Northern Cape, Gauteng North, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and North West, engaging hundreds of athletes, coaches, and local administrators.

The assessment revealed strong technical potential among the U15 and U17 categories, as well as a growing passion for wrestling across communities and schools.

The mission also identified the need for stronger governance structures and more consistent communication between SAWF, provinces, and clubs to unify efforts under a national development plan.

Both teams will continue to work towards second phase of the program which will include establishing two regional pilot centers [Pretoria and Western Cape] to act as training and coordination hubs, launch a "School Integration" program linking PE teachers, schools, and wrestling clubs, developing a national athlete database to monitor and support emerging talents.

It will also aim to organize governance and compliance workshops to reinforce management capacity, implementing UWW coaching courses nationwide, forming a National Technical Committee to coordinate DNSS implementation and introducing measurable evaluation indicators to ensure accountability and progress tracking.