Cape Argus

Cape Town City ‘paid ultimate price’ in final

- KAMLESH GOSAI

INEXPERIEN­CE was a critical factor in Cape Town City’s failure to press home their advantage when they lost the MTN 8 final to SuperSport United despite taking the lead and enjoying a man advantage for almost 40 minutes in Durban at the weekend.

Inexperien­ce in terms of finishing off opponents when they are at your mercy, inexperien­ce when it comes to handling gamesmansh­ip, as well as technical inexperien­ce were some of City’s shortcomin­gs, conceded the Cape side’s coach Benni McCarthy after their penalty shoot-out disappoint­ment at Moses Mabhida Stadium on Saturday night.

While he hailed the contest a “fantastic match” and was gracious in defeat, the rookie coach believed they had the measure of their opponents, whose greater experience made the difference in the 4-2 penalties decider after regulation time and extra time ended 1-1.

“SuperSport are a very experience­d and organised team but I felt we had them covered from the first to 90th minute and extra time. Unfortunat­ely our finishing let us down and we let them off the hook. When you don’t take your opportunit­ies to punish experience­d teams (you suffer),” said McCarthy, who was also aggrieved that they were denied a penalty before SuperSport’s equaliser from Thuso Phala.

The Cape side led from midway through the first half via Sibusiso Masina’s low drive past goalkeeper Ronwen Williams, who later turned hero for United with two blocks during the spot kicks.

“I’m not sure if it’s anxiety or panic or excitement in the moment that they don’t put the ball in the back of the net. When you have someone on the ropes you must go for the jugular. No matter how much you stress it to your players, it’s a South African problem where no team I’ve seen has that killer instinct. And because of that we paid the ultimate price,” McCarthy said.

He also lamented that they allowed United to slow the game down and failed to engage the referee during those moments. McCarthy further conceded that he was at fault for not sending on Ayanda Patosi instead of Roland Putsche to give the team a creative spark.

“As a coach that’s one of the faults you’ve got to take. I took Teko (Modise) off where I should have brought Patosi and there I accept maybe inexperien­ce kicked in, or the excitement of being close to 90 minutes, and not making the right substituti­on at the right moment,” admitted McCarthy.

He viewed it as an opportunit­y to learn and looked forward to returning stronger in the same competitio­n next season.

His counterpar­t, Eric Tinkler, lauded his charges for displaying “great character, great resilience and determinat­ion” to stay in the game through extra time with 10 men, and was already looking ahead to bigger battles on the continent. They go to Tunisia for a semi-final second leg against Club Africain in the CAF Confederat­ion Cup this weekend, looking to overturn the first leg 2-2 draw.

“For me, an MTN8 win is a fantastic start, but I’m the type of person who wants more. I’ve explained to the players that winning trophies must become an addiction, so hopefully we can go there and get a result to get into the final,” Tinkler said.

 ??  ?? THERE IS ALWAYS NEXT YEAR: Benni McCarthy talks to his players during the MTN8 final on Saturday.
THERE IS ALWAYS NEXT YEAR: Benni McCarthy talks to his players during the MTN8 final on Saturday.

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