Cape Argus

Komphela is now relying on others

‘Unfortunat­ely nobody will remember that we lost on penalties’

- MAZOLA MOLEFE

STEVE KOMPHELA sat calmly in the FNB Stadium auditorium, disappoint­ed with the manner in which his Kazier Chiefs side were dumped out of the Nedbank Cup on Saturday night by SuperSport United following the lottery of the penalty shoot-out.

But over the coming days, especially this week seeing that it could be a defining one for the club’s PSL title hopes, the coach will be hit hard by the stark reality that in almost two years he has not delivered a trophy at Naturena.

With the 5-3 win from spot kicks, Komphela’s SuperSport counterpar­t Stuart Baxter will feel his men, on the other hand, could maybe kick on and revive their championsh­ip aspiration­s.

“We came into the match knowing we have it in our own hands and we could determine our own fate,” said the coach, whose Amakhosi side are away to log leaders Cape Town City tomorrow and Matsatsant­sa again on Saturday.

“Unfortunat­ely nobody will remember that we lost on penalties and that we also missed a penalty kick (fluffed by striker Bernard Parker) towards the end of extra-time.

“The sad part about the league championsh­ip is that we still have to depend on other teams dropping points. The Nedbank Cup was better in that you could go on without having to look to anyone else to do you any favours.”

Maybe the Cup defeat stung even more considerin­g that it was Baxter, a former Chiefs coach whose four trophies in three years at the club led to Amakhosi chairman Kaizer Motaung comparing him to Jeff Butler, who died hours before kickoff, that inflicted the pain as SuperSport ended Chiefs’ 14-game unbeaten run in all competitio­ns.

Baxter himself was relived that his players were reacting positively to the 5-0 drubbing to crosstown rivals Mamelodi Sundowns 10 days ago and the narrow 1-0 defeat to the same team six days later.

“We started with the Baroka result (a 1-0 loss that brought their 19-game unbeaten run in the league to a halt), which was a poor performanc­e,” said Baxter.

“And yes we can philosophi­se the poor performanc­e by asking if my discussion­s with Safa about the Bafana job have destabilis­ed the team, or if it’s the long journeys in the CAF Confederat­ion Cup or the injuries to certain players that contribute­d.”

“It doesn’t really matter, a poor performanc­e is a poor performanc­e and tastes just as bad all the time.”

While Komphela could possibly end the season without a trophy for the second season running, Baxter is now chasing a rare feat of winning the Nedbank Cup for two successive years with the same team. He also won the trophy once at Chiefs in 2012-13.

“When you talk about personal success it sounds like you are blowing your own trumpet and it’s a massive ego,” Baxter said.

“I love winning, whether I am playing tennis against my wife or kicking the ball around in the garden with the kids, and I love winning football games.

“So winning a tournament is an even better form of winning. It will be another trophy that shows that I am doing okay and should keep going and shouldn’t stop because I will get hit by a train.”

 ??  ?? EYES ON THE PRIZE: Stuart Baxter moved once step closer to winning the Nedbank Cup for a second successive season after his SuperSport team edged Chiefs in the quarter-finals. BACKPAGEPI­X
EYES ON THE PRIZE: Stuart Baxter moved once step closer to winning the Nedbank Cup for a second successive season after his SuperSport team edged Chiefs in the quarter-finals. BACKPAGEPI­X

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