Cape Argus

Tinkler is already eyeing Confed glory... after MTN8

- NJABULO NGIDI

A SLIP of the tongue from Eric Tinkler revealed the SuperSport United coach’s ambitious side that sees him chasing his second trophy in the space of two years.

Tinkler guided Cape Town City to glory in the Telkom Knockout in December last year at the expense of Matsatsant­sa a Pitori. The Bafana Bafana legend will look to help SuperSport avenge that defeat in the MTN8 final at Moses Mabhida Stadium on Saturday against his former team. Shortly after that, Tinkler will travel to Tunisia looking to make history with Matsatsant­sa by taking them to the final of the CAF Confederat­ion Cup for the first time in the club’s history. That would make him the first South African coach to do that after achieving the feat with Orlando Pirates in 2015.

“SuperSport United is a big club in my mind,” Tinkler said. “It’s a club that has been extremely successful since its foundation and has a very good squad of players. Coming here was an easy decision for me because it matched what I want, in terms of my career as an individual. I want to succeed. I want to win things. I want to be in finals. That’s where you measure yourself as a person and as a coach. For me, it made all the sense in the world coming to a good club like this. I am living my dream. We’ve reached two finals. Well, we’ve got to one final (the MTN8). I am already saying that we are going to get to another final (in the Confederat­ion Cup). That’s the target.”

Tinkler has earned his dues, from cutting his teeth at Wits to coping with lots of pressure at Orlando Pirates and building a team from scratch with the Citizens. That experience will come in handy in his ambition to not only help SuperSport win the MTN8 but also in their bid for the league title that has eluded them for seven years.

“It’s been a long coaching career, obviously I had to start right at the bottom,” Tinkler said. “If anything, that’s aided me as a coach to learn more about myself and improve my coaching experience and my managerial experience. I was given the opportunit­y to take teams on an interim basis, it happened at Wits and at Pirates. That gave me a chance to see where my strengths are. That foundation, it took me 11 years to get here, made me mature as a person – especially having gone through the transition from player to coach at Wits…Everything I learned at Pirates and the pressure that comes with dealing with that helped me grow.”

On Saturday Tinkler will come up against a coaching novice in Benni McCarthy as the two renew the rivalry that saw them almost come to blows in Durban during the 2011 Telkom Knockout final. An incensed McCarthy said Tinkler was lucky that he hadn’t punched him, boasting that as a player he’d achieved more than what Tinkler and Roger de Sa accumulate­d combined.

“That happened years ago,” Tinkler said. “But this final is not about me or Benni. This is about SuperSport and Cape Town City. I am not going to answer questions on that.”

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