Desiree Ellis is a retired South African women"s football player and played as a midfielder.
Background
Ellis grew up in Salt River in the 1970s with her father, Ernest (d 1989) and her grandmother and there were no women's clubs. After school she’d drop her school bag, change her clothes and run outside to her waiting teammates.Her father often threatened to send her to school barefoot because she"d ruin her shoes while playing soccer.
Career
She played for Spurs Ladies. Ellis eventually found a women"s club, Spurs Ladies while she still worked at a butchery in Lansdowne mixing spices. She once left town with the club over a weekend, promising her employers that she"d return in time for work but the vehicle the team was travelling in broke down on the way home, making her fail to arrive on time.
Consequently, Ellis got fired.
She also had many administration occupations during her playing career. She was the vice-president of Western Province Women"s Football Association from 1994 to 1995 and later the Public Relations Officer of the association from 1996 to 1997.
She also worked as a Chief Librarian at a photo agency, Touchline in 2001. Ellis went for trials for the national team and passed and would feature in the team"s first international match.
She played against Swaziland at the remarkable age of 30 on 30 May 1993 winning 14–0.
Ellis scored a hat-trick with two other players. During the 1995 World Cup qualifiers, South Africa beat Zimbabwe, Zambia and Angola on aggregate, 10–1, 11–5 and 6–4 but were halted by Nigeria beating them 11–2. When South Africa hosted the 2000 African Women"s Championship, she captained the side to a runners-up finish.
In 2000, Ellis was nominated alongside Mercy Akide and Florence Omagbemi for African Woman Football player of the Year.
She also led the team to 2002 Cosafa Cup victory. She retired from soccer in April 2002 at the age of 38.
Ellis can be seen on television as a soccer commentator and a pundit on local television station e-television She also worked at Gallo Images as a picture editors
Membership
She is a founding member of the South Africa women"s national football team and the second captain of the national team