Cape Argus

Should Bafana have gone to Thailand?

- MAZOLA MOLEFE

SAFA have confirmed that Bafana Bafana will travel to Zambia later this month to take part in a four nations tournament, which will include the hosts, Zimbabwe and Angola.

But this was done without the input of coach Stuart Baxter, who wanted to go to the King’s Cup in Thailand instead.

We look at the pros and cons of participat­ing in either tournament, and which one would suit the national team best… 2018 King’s Cup (Thailand)

Pros: Baxter said he’d written a fourpage report on why it was important for a new crop of Bafana players to head over to Bangkok to gain internatio­nal experience. They would have taken on Slovakia (Europe), the United Arab Emirates (the Gulf ) and Thailand (Asia).

“Three different styles, humid weather conditions and that would have been a great opportunit­y,” the Bafana coach argued.

This was well thought out by Baxter and given his contacts he would have already made arrangemen­ts and planned ahead, unlike the last-minute preparatio­ns that have become synonymous with Safa.

Cons: We are in Africa and the coach’s mandate is to qualify for the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations in Cameroon. There is not much time or matches for Baxter to test whether the youngsters he plans to introduce to the national set-up are ready or not.

It would have been pointless for him to take them all the way to Asia, see them brush shoulders with teams they will never face in World Cup qualifiers for Qatar 2022 and then be humiliated by their continenta­l counterpar­ts. Also, who would have covered the costs of this trip?

Safa don’t necessaril­y have bags of money stashed away at their Nasrec headquarte­rs. Organising friendlies against non-African teams suggests Bafana are better than their counterpar­ts here, despite failing to qualify for the 2017 Afcon and this year’s World Cup. Four Nations tournament (Zambia)

Pros: A choice that clearly rubbed up Baxter the wrong way, but in the end was the best one. Safa have always said the goal for the associatio­n is to see Bafana back in the top-five teams in Africa and improving their overall Fifa ranking, which is 77th at the moment.

To do that, the national team has to consistent­ly measure up against the best on the continent, and Zambia and Zimbabwe are a good start considerin­g how far their football has come in the last two years. Bafana have regressed, while these two nations are producing a golden generation (the irony is that both countries have a growing number of their top players based in the PSL) that’s aiming to impress at next year’s Afcon should they qualify, which is a high probabilit­y.

Cons: Baxter was only told on Tuesday morning by his employers that the trip to Thailand would not be happening and that the squad he will pick for this month’s internatio­nal break will be heading to Zambia instead.

You can imagine his shock and frustratio­n. Will he be able to get his team ready for a competitio­n he knew nothing about until minutes before he was to have a breakfast meeting with several journalist­s to map out his plans for 2018?

 ?? BACKPAGEPI­X ?? NOTHING TO SMILE ABOUT: Bafana will take part in a four-nation tournament in Zambia later this month, despite coach Stuart Baxter having no input in the matter.
BACKPAGEPI­X NOTHING TO SMILE ABOUT: Bafana will take part in a four-nation tournament in Zambia later this month, despite coach Stuart Baxter having no input in the matter.

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