Cape Argus

Benni can’t stop waxing lyrical about the continuing maturity of Craig

- RODNEY REINERS

THERE is clarity in defeat from which valuable lessons can be taken. For Cape Town City coach Benni McCarthy, despite two losses on the trot, the road ahead now looks much clearer.

At the weekend, the Cape side lost on penalties to SuperSport United in the MTN8 final in Durban. On Tuesday night, they went down 1-0 to Bloemfonte­in Celtic in a PSL match at Athlone Stadium. In the former, McCarthy took responsibi­lity and admitted that some of the tactical decisions he made contribute­d to the defeat.

“We were flat against Celtic, we were nowhere near to winning,” said McCarthy. “We gave nothing, we had one shot on target for the entire 90 minutes. There was no fight, no heart. We had no creativity, we were just dull. This was an opportunit­y for other guys to put their hands up and show me what they’ve got, but they didn’t show up. In contrast, Celtic were fantastic. They were organised and used an intelligen­t game plan. They were physical and used their big players very well.”

While McCarthy was visibly disappoint­ed with the team’s underwhelm­ing performanc­e, there were a few positives – in the performanc­es of reserve goalkeeper Sage Stephens, tireless midfielder Thabo Nodada and excellent newcomer Craig Martin. The City coach, in fact, couldn’t stop waxing lyrical about the continuing maturity of Martin, a footballer who just a few months ago was still playing amateur football. Stephens pulled off a few good saves and is certainly putting pressure on veteran No 1 goalkeeper Shu-Aib Walters, while the dynamic Nodada is blossoming as one of the PSL’s most committed and energetic footballer­s.

Martin is 25-years-old already, but, when he was signed in July this year, both McCarthy and club boss John Comitis made the point that good footballer­s sometimes are lost because they don’t get picked up by the Cape’s profession­al football clubs.

“As physical as Celtic were on Tuesday, Martin was our toughest body out there,” said McCarthy. “He’s the skinniest player, but he was a gladiator… he’s come from amateur football, he’s never really played at this level before, but he has the biggest heart. In fact, it was the two smallest players on the park – Martin and Nodada – who gave me the most; they left everything on the pitch, while their teammates just couldn’t keep up. Let me tell you, if there are two players I will pick to go to war with, it’s Martin and Nodada.”

And this was the lesson for McCarthy with regards to his squad as he ponders the rest of the season.

“I thought I would have some hard decisions to make, but most of the players on show on Tuesday have made it easier for me with that performanc­e,” he said. “There will be no more risks, no more gambles, no more wholesale changes… Now I will simply pick the strongest available team. The guys had an opportunit­y to stake a claim and they didn’t show. The only one is Martin, he has definitely played his way into the team. After Tuesday, I’ve got to know more about the squad and that is what I can take from the defeat against Celtic.”

Next up for City is a trip to East London to take on former Cape club Chippa United on Sunday afternoon (3.30pm kickoff ).

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