Manica Diamonds owners ask ZIFA to disband senior team amid wage dispute
Manica Diamonds risk senior-team disbandment as new owners ask ZIFA to dissolve the first team amid unpaid wages, player boycotts and a proposed restructure.
New owners seek ZIFA approval to dissolve first team
Africa Mineral Ventures, the recently appointed owners of Manica Diamonds, have formally approached the Zimbabwe Football Association (ZIFA) requesting permission to disband the club’s senior squad.
The move follows the takeover and a succession of operational and financial problems the new ownership says make continuation of the existing first-team structure untenable.
The request was made in a written submission to ZIFA that sets out the new owners’ intention to end the current senior team and pursue an alternative model based on their Division One side together with the club’s youth setup.
The letter argues the proposed reconfiguration will allow the business to restart on a firmer financial footing while preserving the club’s development pathway.
Contents of the ownership letter and proposed restructuring
In their correspondence, Africa Mineral Ventures explains that unpaid obligations incurred under the previous administration created a liability they are unwilling to assume in full.
The new owners say they immediately advanced salaries to players and staff upon taking control, but they maintain that legacy debts and contractual arrangements tied to the former regime prevent them from sustaining the present first-team roster.
As part of the proposal, the owners recommend dissolving the senior squad and merging their Division One side with the club’s junior teams to create a consolidated structure aimed at cost control and youth development.
The submission frames the change as a necessary reset, designed to protect the club’s future competitiveness while limiting exposure to the financial failures of past operators.
Players boycott training amid demands for unpaid wages
Tensions between players and the new management have escalated in recent days, with a reported boycott of a scheduled training session at Sakubva Stadium.
Players are said to have stayed away to press for clarity on outstanding salaries and signing-on fees that they contend remain unresolved despite the ownership change.
Club insiders told reporters that the training absence was a show of frustration over the slow pace of confirmation on payments and contractual security.
The standoff highlights the fragile relationship between the squad and the new board as both sides negotiate who is accountable for what the letter describes as legacy liabilities.
Management stance: ‘clean slate’ and reduced match incentives
According to sources close to the club, the incoming owner has signalled an intention to commence operations from what he describes as a “clean slate,” declining responsibility for debts the previous administration accumulated.
That position has been reinforced by changes to the team’s incentive structure, with match-winning bonuses reportedly reduced from US$500 to US$150 under the new regime.
The cut in bonuses has further aggravated player discontent and fed into the broader narrative of a management determined to implement immediate cost-savings.
Management officials say the reduction is part of broader financial measures necessary to stabilise the club, though players and their representatives view the move as punitive while outstanding back pay remains an open issue.
Immediate sporting implications and threat of match boycott
The dispute has created the real prospect of a fixture disruption: players have threatened to boycott the club’s scheduled game against Hardrock FC at Greenfuel Arena in Chisumbanje this Saturday.
A refusal to fulfil that fixture would likely trigger disciplinary procedures from the Premier Soccer League, which enforces sanctions for match abandonment and non-appearance.
Club officials note that a cancelled match would carry penalties that could extend beyond fines to competitive consequences, heightening the stakes of the dispute for all parties.
Players, for their part, say they are prepared to escalate until there is a binding settlement on the arrears and clearer assurances about contractual terms under the new ownership.
Reactions from stakeholders and implications for local football
The situation at Manica Diamonds is drawing attention across domestic football circles, with supporters, sponsors and league administrators monitoring developments closely.
Sustained instability at one club can have ripple effects, including financial strain on matchday operations, potential sponsor withdrawals, and scheduling complications for the league and opponents.
Youth coaches and local development officers have expressed concern that dismantling a senior side could unsettle developmental pathways for academy players who rely on a clear progression to senior football.
Africa Mineral Ventures’ plan to fold the first team into a structure centred on their Division One outfit and junior teams is presented as a way to keep youth talent within the club, but its success hinges on transparent governance and credible financing.
Players’ representatives are expected to seek formal talks with the owners and ZIFA in the coming days to resolve payments and contractual certainty.
ZIFA and the PSL will be central to any negotiated solution, balancing the need to uphold league regulations with the practicalities of rescuing a club in distress.
The coming 48 to 72 hours are likely to be decisive, with potential appeals to the league, local mediators and possibly legal advisors if the impasse remains.
Both the sporting calendar and the livelihoods of those employed by the club depend on a rapid, orderly resolution that addresses past arrears while establishing a clear plan for future operations.
Manica Diamonds’ next steps will be watched closely by the football community as the club navigates the difficult transition from one ownership group to another amid unresolved financial obligations and heightened player unrest.
Fans and neutral observers alike will be looking for a compromise that safeguards competitive integrity and preserves a pathway for young players, while ensuring the club meets its obligations to personnel and the competition.










