Benedict McCarthy is a former
South Africanfootballer who represented his country 79 times and scored 31 goals between 1997 and 2012.[1] He played as a
forward during the course of his career and is the top scorer in the history of the national team, having broken
Shaun Bartlett's previous record of 29 international goals in a
friendly win over
Paraguay in March 2008.[2]
Having previously represented South Africa at
under-23 level, McCarthy made his senior debut on 4 June 1997 against the
Netherlands.[3] He scored his first international goals on 16 February 1998, scoring four times in 13 minutes against
Namibia at the
1998 African Cup of Nations. He added another goal against
Morocco and scored twice more against the
Democratic Republic of Congo to lead South Africa to the final. Though the nation were ultimately beaten by
Egypt, McCarthy was named Player of the Tournament, and collected the Top Scorer award for his seven goals.[4][5] Later that year, at the
1998 FIFA World Cup in France, he scored South Africa's first ever goal at a
World Cup finals, netting the equaliser in a 1–1 draw with
Denmark that saw the nation earn a point at the competition for the first time.[6] Adding three
friendly goals against
Iceland and Egypt, McCarthy ended with 11 goals to his name for the year.
He temporarily retired from international football in 1999 following club-versus-country conflicts and missed the
2000 African Cup of Nations as a result.[7] Two years later, he scored at the
2002 FIFA World Cup in a 3–2 loss to
Spain.[8]
On 9 September 2007, McCarthy equalled Bartlett's national record when he scored in a 3–1 loss to
Zambia.[9] He broke the record the following year against Paraguay and scored one more goal before retiring from football in 2013 at the age of 35.[10] At the time of his retirement, he was South Africa's fourth
most-capped player. Of McCarthy's 31 international goals, 15 were scored in friendlies – including 2 at the
HKSAR Reunification Cup and 1 at
U.S. Cup – 7 at the African Cup of Nations, 4 during African Cup of Nations qualifying, 3 in World Cup qualifying and a further 2 at the World Cup finals.
International goals
South Africa score listed first, score column indicates score after each McCarthy goal.[11]