Cape Argus

If you play with no heart, you will come off second best, laments coach Benni

- RODNEY REINERS PSL fixtures Tomorrow:

CAPE TOWN CITY’S dreadful performanc­e in defeat to Golden Arrows at the Cape Town Stadium on Wednesday left a disappoint­ed head coach Benni McCarthy pulling his hair out in frustratio­n.

Now, with another tricky PSL fixture looming, against high-riding Maritzburg United at the Harry Gwala Stadium tomorrow night (kickoff 8.15pm), the former Bafana Bafana striker is desperate for the real City to turn up.

The Cape side has been largely schizophre­nic this season. One week, they’re brilliant, the next they sink to the depths of mediocrity. It’s this Jekyll and Hyde inconsiste­ncy McCarthy just hasn’t been able to solve. But, as a new coach, it’s all part and parcel of his learning curve. All he can do is focus on the next game and urge his players to dig deep and find their true potential.

“What can I say?” said McCarthy. “It was a very frustratin­g evening (against Arrows), especially when you have warned the players that they are up against a team desperate for three points. And if you are not going to get into a contest, then you are going to come off second best. We wanted to play too much beautiful football, we refused to get dirty, we never got stuck in ALSO INSIDE Bahrain GP, P25 SA Lifesaving, P27 Super Rugby, P27 and we played with no heart.

“Arrows were fighting for their lives, they wanted it more, and they got their reward. We pulled out of tackles, we were second best in everything; too many players weren’t up for the fight and, in the end, we deserved to lose.”

McCarthy insists that, for the players, as profession­als, they should always be aware of what their task is. Needless to say, he is demanding a response against Maritzburg tomorrow.

“It shouldn’t even be about motivation,” he said. “This is the job. We had everything to play for (against Arrows), but just weren’t up for it. We never dealt with their counter-attacks, while we were just too slow in transition. Our final third entry was the worst I’ve seen. When we got to the front, it looked like we didn’t know what we wanted to do. It was a really terrible result for us.”

City remain in sixth position on the PSL standings, with 34 points, and five games still to play. Teams below are starting to catch up and the danger for the Capetonian­s is they could miss out on a high finish if they continue in this fashion.

“I think, perhaps in future, I shouldn’t even mention that other teams are catching up,” said the City coach. “Because I brought that up and look at the performanc­e? Maybe I should just focus on us, and not focus on the other teams and the league table. I mean we could have finished so much higher. Now, I don’t know.”

Maritzburg United coach Fadlu Davids attended City’s match on Wednesday and was a watchful, attentive presence in the VIP area, hoping to get an idea of what to expect from the Cape side tomorrow. But, and this is probably a positive for McCarthy, Davids (a Capetonian, too) wouldn’t have learnt too much from such a diabolical performanc­e. City certainly can’t play any worse – Davids will be aware of this, while there’s no doubt McCarthy’s men are desperate and determined to put up a better showing.

“Maritzburg are fourth in the league and they deserve to be there, so I don’t think we can say they are punching above their weight,” said McCarthy. “As a team, they have a lot of energy and they have a good coach (Fadlu Davids) who has them well-drilled.”

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