Business Day

Sundowns’ fatigue a concern against Esperance

- Marc Strydom

With a huge Champions League semifinal clash against Esperance de Tunis this weekend it is not so much a question of if Mamelodi Sundowns are tiring as it is how much they have tired.

Given how many matches Sundowns are to play as they compete in six competitio­ns, progressin­g far in almost all of them, the Premier Soccer League’s (PSL) scheduling of midweek games as Downs play a huge continenta­l semifinal has to raise questions.

Sundowns drew their PSL clash against Moroka Swallows 2-2 on Monday night. The manner in which the Brazilians blew a 2-0 lead was an indication of how their gruelling schedule is catching up.

On Tuesday they left for Tunisia, where Rulani Mokwena’s team meet Esperance in Saturday’s first leg at Stade Olympique Hammadi Agrebi in Tunis (9pm SA time). Downs fly home on Sunday and have to face Sekhukhune United in their league fixture at Loftus Versfeld on Tuesday. The second leg against Esperance is at the same venue next Friday.

The PSL has been notoriousl­y unsympathe­tic in its scheduling of matches as Sundowns fly the SA flag in continenta­l football year after year. When Downs won the 2016 Champions League thencoach Pitso Mosimane coined the rallying cry “against all odds ” as the PSL refused to clear domestic games to help a team chasing continenta­l and Premiershi­p titles.

Downs were reportedly the only team of the eight in the 202324 Champions League quarterfin­als who had to play a midweek match before one of the legs, the second, in their 3-2 aggregate win against Young Africans.

Esperance are already fresher than Sundowns. The North Africans — including the African Football League (AFL), where they went out in the semifinals, Champions League and their league —

have played 28 matches in 202324 so far. No domestic cup competitio­ns have been played in Tunisia yet this season. Sundowns —

MTN8 finalists, inaugural AFL winners, Champions League and Nedbank Cup semifinali­sts and runaway Premiershi­p leaders —

have played 39 games.

Esperance, as is the custom in most countries when their teams are seeking continenta­l glory, have no midweek fixtures to distract them ahead of both legs of the semifinal. They have played two games this month, Downs have played five, and it’s only April 17.

In a Champions League semifinal against clubs that, given their longer existences and years partaking, always have a more establishe­d pedigree, small margins count. Esperance are four-time Champions League winners (1994, 2011, 2018 and 2019), Sundowns have one title.

No midweek domestic matches scheduled for one team, a side that has also played 11 games fewer this season (more than a quarter less than Downs), and less than half the matches this month, is not a small margin.

Sundowns are only one or two matches behind other sides in their Premiershi­p schedule. They could have fallen farther behind and played catch-up later. Even if their match against Swallows was on a Monday, it makes a world of difference between having a full week or more to travel and prepare and leaving on a Tuesday.

Downs’ other recent results, needing a dubious penalty decision to see off last-placed PSL team Cape Town Spurs and a penalty shoot-out to get past first division Pretoria University FC in the Nedbank Cup, are further indication­s of their fatigue.

In some ways this is the reality of competing at the level to which Sundowns aspire. It is why they have a big squad. Rotation, though, when balancing seeking trophies and keeping players happy, can present its own challenges.

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