Cape Argus

Everything happens for a reason, says Sandilands

- NJABULO NGIDI

THE LONG wait Wayne Sandilands endured before he once again became a No 1 goalkeeper shaped him to be the confident figure who has brought stability in Orlando Pirates’ defence.

The Bafana Bafana goalkeeper struggled for consistent game time at Mamelodi Sundowns. Sandilands was behind Uganda’s numeber one Denis Onyango and an Africa Cup of Nations winner with Zambia in 2012, Kennedy Mweene, in the pecking order.

The ‘keeper from Benoni made just 15 appearance­s for Sundowns in the last four seasons. Despite that, he made the most of the limited chances he got and wasn’t demotivate­d by his struggle.

“I don’t regret anything from the past,” Sandilands said. “Everything that happens, happens for a reason.

“What I went through has built me to be the person that I am today. I take a lot of positive from the last two years, winning the (Caf) Champions League and gaining valuable experience.

“For me it has always been about being ready, always knowing that life gives you opportunit­ies and you must take them. It’s added steel to my character. I am grateful for that time. It’s made me who I am today. I am looking to build on the good platform that we have already establishe­d. It’s a team effort. We just have to keep on setting high standards for ourselves and look to improve.”

Sandilands has kept four clean sheets in five matches.

He has brought something that Pirates desperatel­y needed last season, a solid goalkeeper who commands the box well after Bucs conceded 40 goals in the PSL last season. Only three other teams conceded more goals than that.

With Sandilands, the Sea Robbers have tightened things at the back to have the best defensive record in this campaign, having been beaten only once in five matches. League champions Wits will offer them their biggest test thus far on Saturday.

Milutin “Micho” Sredojevic is confident the Buccaneers will once again come out on top.

The Serbian coach was full of praise for the 34-year-old ‘keeper, describing him as a “gentleman” who in “the 25 years of coaching, is in the top five of the most profession­al players that I have seen.”

“I remember Sandilands as an opponent,” Sredojevic said.

“I am honoured, pleased and privileged to have him as my player now. He has immeasurab­le contributi­on towards things happening on and off the field.

“He is an extended arm of us as the coaching stuff.

“He injects the team with maturity, seniority and leadership. Therefore, empowering him and other players has been a formula that has worked for us off the field. On the field, he gives a lot of confidence to the team.

“He gives the team reasons to work for him and he works for the team. It is twoway traffic. For now things have been going in the right direction.

“This match (against Cape Town City) is now in the past. We are looking into the future against Wits.”

 ??  ?? Wayne Sandilands
Wayne Sandilands

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