Dubai Telegraph - S.Africa's daredevil autosport of spinning stokes passions

EUR -
AED 4.250771
AFN 74.066749
ALL 95.001226
AMD 426.090135
ANG 2.072075
AOA 1062.389246
ARS 1654.054338
AUD 1.642461
AWG 2.08488
AZN 1.971981
BAM 1.955422
BBD 2.330649
BDT 142.332487
BGN 1.932575
BHD 0.436418
BIF 3461.443314
BMD 1.157286
BND 1.485713
BOB 7.99642
BRL 5.8752
BSD 1.157176
BTN 110.007211
BWP 15.577921
BYN 3.201681
BYR 22682.811417
BZD 2.32734
CAD 1.617991
CDF 2655.97247
CHF 0.922131
CLF 0.026522
CLP 1043.826406
CNY 7.836569
CNH 7.827179
COP 4034.774518
CRC 526.395973
CUC 1.157286
CUP 30.668087
CVE 110.665549
CZK 24.13197
DJF 205.673376
DKK 7.474454
DOP 67.946866
DZD 154.301436
EGP 60.155168
ERN 17.359294
ETB 182.343365
FJD 2.563857
FKP 0.867848
GBP 0.862774
GEL 3.067261
GGP 0.867848
GHS 12.844462
GIP 0.867848
GMD 83.907713
GNF 10137.040512
GTQ 8.821295
GYD 242.102156
HKD 9.068288
HNL 30.943019
HRK 7.533244
HTG 151.300754
HUF 351.741014
IDR 20568.912267
ILS 3.380225
IMP 0.867848
INR 110.013082
IQD 1515.906975
IRR 1592425.944766
ISK 144.202286
JEP 0.867848
JMD 183.424544
JOD 0.820562
JPY 185.425623
KES 149.811156
KGS 101.205131
KHR 4649.10133
KMF 493.004368
KPW 1041.390148
KRW 1757.675298
KWD 0.356965
KYD 0.964409
KZT 565.863064
LAK 25480.964445
LBP 103630.620489
LKR 387.94501
LRD 210.60838
LSL 18.848757
LTL 3.417166
LVL 0.700031
LYD 7.375574
MAD 10.717728
MDL 20.210006
MGA 4829.045683
MKD 61.627081
MMK 2428.970059
MNT 4142.416896
MOP 9.339775
MRU 45.895128
MUR 54.682215
MVR 17.880511
MWK 2006.62079
MXN 19.924663
MYR 4.696388
MZN 73.962604
NAD 18.848757
NGN 1575.113377
NIO 42.581769
NOK 11.003664
NPR 176.010977
NZD 1.9847
OMR 0.444978
PAB 1.157171
PEN 3.935439
PGK 5.067021
PHP 70.212993
PKR 321.958865
PLN 4.244174
PYG 7085.630349
QAR 4.230282
RON 5.236146
RSD 117.362762
RUB 83.903232
RWF 1699.364171
SAR 4.345036
SBD 9.311158
SCR 16.005678
SDG 694.954675
SEK 10.905496
SGD 1.485482
SHP 0.864031
SLE 28.527536
SLL 24267.717436
SOS 661.372157
SRD 43.409235
STD 23953.489791
STN 24.495265
SVC 10.125043
SYP 127.917282
SZL 18.83336
THB 37.902327
TJS 10.784969
TMT 4.044716
TND 3.394944
TOP 2.786467
TRY 53.541508
TTD 7.860447
TWD 36.610796
TZS 3034.986829
UAH 51.852277
UGX 4339.161241
USD 1.157286
UYU 46.740359
UZS 13859.261129
VES 673.491834
VND 30448.202468
VUV 138.664834
WST 3.180223
XAF 655.830228
XAG 0.017015
XAU 0.000274
XCD 3.127625
XCG 2.085497
XDR 0.816027
XOF 655.830228
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.132664
ZAR 18.851957
ZMK 10416.969563
ZMW 20.216005
ZWL 372.645715
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.72

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.36

    +0.04%

  • BP

    0.1100

    42.79

    +0.26%

  • BCE

    -0.0650

    24.505

    -0.27%

  • NGG

    0.2000

    81.72

    +0.24%

  • GSK

    0.3750

    53.235

    +0.7%

  • RYCEF

    0.4500

    17.5

    +2.57%

  • BTI

    1.0050

    62.395

    +1.61%

  • RELX

    0.4950

    33.605

    +1.47%

  • VOD

    0.2700

    15.53

    +1.74%

  • JRI

    0.0530

    12.883

    +0.41%

  • RIO

    1.5800

    105.22

    +1.5%

  • AZN

    -2.8460

    179.434

    -1.59%

  • BCC

    1.2700

    71.93

    +1.77%

  • CMSD

    0.0090

    22.309

    +0.04%

S.Africa's daredevil autosport of spinning stokes passions
S.Africa's daredevil autosport of spinning stokes passions / Photo: PHILL MAGAKOE - AFP

S.Africa's daredevil autosport of spinning stokes passions

Tyres screech across an empty parking lot in Soweto as 40-year-old Nalo Jivhuho sends her black BMW skidding and spinning in a cloud of white smoke and fumes.

Text size:

As soon as she slips into the hotseat, the human resources developer becomes "Dankie Darlie", impassioned enthusiast of South Africa's increasingly popular daredevil motorsport of spinning.

In a tank top and braids, Jivhuho uses her tattooed left arm to spin the steering wheel as she forces the car into high-speed skids and stunts like the circular manoeuvre called a doughnut.

"If you are able to make a tyre pop, then you are pretty special," says Jivhuho, mother of an admiring teenaged son. "When you hear a pop, you are going to hear the crowd go wild."

This adrenaline-pumping sport was born in Johannesburg's sprawling Soweto township in the 1980s, when South Africa was still under the race-based apartheid system.

"It used to be seen as a gangster sport associated with people going into the white areas to steal these shaped cars, come to Soweto and spin them," says Jivhuho.

The underground image changed when spinning was recognised as an official sport 10 years ago; today it has fans and performers across southern Africa and big brand sponsors.

At its most extreme levels, the passenger or even driver will climb out of the spinning car, hanging from the window or roof in stunts that thrill the crowds.

- Fumes and fans -

A few hours before Jivhuho's training session, her four cars are checked over at her home by an all-male group of mechanics. "She can kill you for these cars," jokes one of them, Nqobile Tshabalala.

Jivhuho says: "Maintaining these spin cars is a lot but I have a great support system from my family and my team. Without them, 'Dankie Darlie' would not exist."

She wants to make one thing clear: she is not "one of the boys". "Spinning is a way of me expressing myself, expressing my femininity," she says.

"I inspire other females and that's a big thing because there aren't a lot of us females in the spinning industry in South Africa."

Young women are also among the drivers at a weekend show at the Wheelz N Smoke arena southeast of Johannesburg.

The atmosphere is festive as hundreds of spectators, some with coolers and shisha pipes, cheer on spinning crews who have come from across the country to show off their skills.

The noise and smell of burning rubber and exhaust fumes is intoxicating. Of the more than two dozen cars taking part, some have no hoods or windscreens; one is souped up to look like a New York taxi.

In some performances, a passenger leans right out of the car to hype the crowds as the driver pulls stunts and manoeuvres around obstacles. There are a couple of cars with just a solo woman at the wheel; in one, a mom and dad are in the front seats with their two children in the back.

Off track, men carry away shredded tyres.

"Man, I'm a petrol head, so anything that makes some noise and a lot of smoke will get me going!" says Chahid, who only gives his first name, as he watched from his burger stand.

He enjoys this arena, the oldest in South Africa. "It's secured, the kids are safe, families can come, it becomes a family affair," he says.

As the sport became recognised, the arena moved spinning off the streets and into a space that better protects spectators. "It is more of a danger to them if a car happens to lose control," says the owner, Monde Hashe.

"I started spinning when it was illegal," says professional spinner Iksaan "Iki" Khan. "When this place opened, we had more opportunities and more play time," he says, as he heads out to perform.

A.Murugan--DT