Feature

Namibia's cricket dream finally has a home in Windhoek

The country's first dedicated and fully equipped cricket venue will host its first international match this weekend

Firdose Moonda
Firdose Moonda
10-Oct-2025
Namibia's first dedicated cricket ground also houses an indoor centre and a gym

The NCG will be a vital boost for Namibia cricket, whose fortunes have been on an uptick since 2021  •  Cricket Namibia

Never before have Namibian cricketers had their own facility to train and play at, but as of 2025, that's changed.
Construction of the Namibia Cricket Ground (NCG) was finished in August, and it's now officially open, complete with an indoor centre and a gym. On Saturday it will host its first international match, between Namibia and their neighbours South Africa, the highest-profile fixture on Namibian soil to date.
"It really feels like a new dawn and new age for the sport," Gerhard Erasmus, Namibia's captain says. "It's our first high-performance venue and the first time that as sportsmen, we don't have to drive around to two or three different venues in a day to go to different training sessions. That's what it means for the players, but what it means for the community is also massive.
"Cricket isn't even one of the biggest sports in the country [but] all the tickets [for the one-off T20I] were sold out so quickly. People are buying their blue Namibia Eagles shirts in numbers from the offices, so we feel very proud. Usually, rugby and soccer are sports where you hear stories about full stadiums and lots of vibe, and it's so cool that this is our first event and we'll have 4000 people and everybody's almost fighting each other in town for a ticket. I never thought I would say that as a cricketer."
The draw of seeing a South African side headlined by Quinton de Kock's international return could be one reason for the interest in the match, but the thrill of watching their own national side at a brand new, centrally accessible venue is another. The NCG has been built in the heart of the country's capital, Windhoek, in a precinct where the streets are named after different sporting codes. There's Netball Street, Rugby Street, and even, you guessed it, Cricket Street, where a new paved road leads into and out of the stadium. The ground itself features one main building and grass embankments, giving it a hybrid feel - part big stadium, part club ground. All of this infrastructure is ensconced in an area dedicated to physical activity.
Just next door is the national rugby stadium and a few blocks away is Independence Stadium, which hosted some of Namibian cricket's early matches. Since then, fixtures have been played about five kilometres away at a privately owned club ground called Wanderers, which Cricket Namibia had to rent to use. Wanderers is a multi-sport facility that is also used by club members, which Erasmus has previously described as "not ideal" to have as a home base.
"We've all grown up at Wanderers and trained around there, but we didn't really have our own home," he says. "Now we have one and it's right next to the other stadiums. Because it's newly built, it really feels like a refreshment in that vicinity."
For Erasmus, the unveiling of a cricket-specific venue - especially when other sports are seeing a downturn - is also a reward for what Namibian cricket has achieved since 2021, when they qualified for their first T20 World Cup. The national rugby team have missed out on automatic qualification for the 2027 World Cup for the first time since 1999, and the football team are on the verge of being knocked out of contention for the next year's World Cup. But cricket continues to enjoy success.
Last week, Namibia secured a fourth successive T20 World Cup qualification and dominated all their opposition until they lost to Zimbabwe in the final, a result that was irrelevant to their participation at the World Cup. In the four matches that mattered, Namibia posted totals over 200 twice and JJ Smit and Jan Frylinck both registered maiden T20I hundreds. Though their batting strength throughout the qualifiers was notable against opposition like Kenya, Nigeria and Malawi, none of whom have played at a T20 World Cup, Erasmus is careful not to get too far ahead of himself. "In all fairness, it was probably one of our easiest qualifications. It felt like it was written in the stars that we had to qualify because there's lots of things going for us," he says. "We've played most of our games at Harare Sports Club, so there were no upsets in terms of conditions. We really had it nice. As cricketers, you always tend to moan when it goes badly. This time around, it all went swimmingly."
Again, the importance of a dedicated venue was underlined but it is not the only reason Namibia enjoyed a good week in Zimbabwe. Erasmus also credited a change in approach, which has come with new management and head coach, Craig Williams, Namibia's leading all-format run-getter. "With the new set-up and the new coach in the last couple of months, pressure has been taken off us in terms of having to score, having to bat a certain way or having to do a certain thing. It's more of an assess-and-react blueprint we tend to follow," he says. "Guys are much calmer and they're setting a better foundation. We've always been known to hit the ball very well. We've got power and everybody knows our six-hitting ability, but [the ability] to construct an innings has sometimes been lacking. It feels like it's really changed in the last couple of months. Even domestically, we have lots more hundreds over the recent past."
Now that needs to translate into the 50-over game, because Namibia are not guaranteed a place at the 2027 ODI tournament - played across South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia - and have a long way to go in qualifying. They are currently in sixth spot on the eight-team ​​World Cricket League Two table, 11 points off the leaders Scotland, with 12 matches left to play. Irrespective of where they finish on that table, they will still have a chance to get to the World Cup. The top four teams progress directly to the World Cup Qualifier and the bottom four to the playoffs, so the possibility of playing in a home World Cup is still alive and Erasmus knows how crucial it is that they give it their best shot.
"For Associate nations it's very important to qualify to stay relevant in world cricket," he says. "Obviously we have fewer opportunities than Test nations, and in T20 World Cups we have the carrot dangling every second year, but even then, like you would have seen with Scotland, there's big repercussions to not qualifying. As players as well, you feel like you're missing out." And missing out on their own party and their own venue in two years' time is not something Namibia want at all.

Firdose Moonda is ESPNcricinfo's correspondent for South Africa and women's cricket