Business Day

Chiefs midfielder wary of SuperSport set-up

- Sazi Hadebe

With at least five key SuperSport United players unavailabl­e because of injuries‚ Kaizer Chiefs should be fancying their chances against a side they have failed to beat in two previous ties in different cup competitio­ns.

Chiefs’ midfielder Willard Katsande has‚ however‚ warned his teammates not to underestim­ate the players United coach Kaitano Tembo will deploy to fill the spots left by the injured Dean Furman‚ Bradley Grobler‚ Thabo Mnyamane‚ Evans Rusike and Fargie Lakay.

The teams meet in the quarterfin­als of the Telkom Knockout at Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban on Sunday with Tembo’s team boasting an overall eight-game unbeaten run against Amakhosi.

That record includes United dumping Chiefs out of the MTN8 this season and knocking them out of the Nedbank Cup in the 2016/17 season.

United will be looking to complete their domestic cup run over Chiefs if they win again on Sunday‚ and Katsande has called on his teammates not to read too much into the changes that will be made by Tembo in Durban.

“We should be more worried about the philosophy of SuperSport. We’ve been planning around their philosophy because you can remove one certain individual but the system stays the same,” he said.

The Chiefs midfielder said the United players who will replace injured colleagues could be very dangerous as they will be looking to cement their positions in the team.

“It will be a chance for somebody who will get an opportunit­y to showcase their talents‚” Katsande said.

“So we have been working according to their game plan‚ according to their set-up because obviously even if you go to Barcelona the set-up stays the same even if [Lionel] Messi is not there.

“So we just need to be worried more about their system [rather] than the individual­s.

“We need to know how to counter-press them‚ and how to execute our game plan against them,” he said.

The Zimbabwean also wants his teammates not to be intimidate­d by their recent poor record over Matsatsant­sa.

“We all know that history says that we’ve not beaten them in eight matches but this is a new game with different ingredient­s‚” he said. “So we are looking forward to the challenge and looking forward to giving our fans something to smile about.

“We need to take responsibi­lity on the field and try to play and do everything as a team.”

Chiefs have the best record in the history of this cup competitio­n with 13 triumphs in the 17 cup finals since it was launched as the Datsun Challenge in 1982.

Mamelodi Sundowns come a distant second with three trophies in seven finals, while defending champions Wits have also won the competitio­n three times in five finals.

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