Cape Argus

Coach Pitso knows you can’t win the Comrades by sprinting

- NJABULO NGIDI

PITSO MOSIMANE will not change Mamelodi Sundowns’ approach in what will be a gruelling campaign that will see the top three teams in South Africa compete for the PSL and play continenta­l football as well.

The Brazilians, who won the league title, and runners-up Orlando Pirates will represent SA in next season’s Caf Champions League, while Kaizer Chiefs, who finished third, will compete in the Confederat­ion Cup. Their participat­ion in continenta­l football will be key in the title race as next season’s continenta­l football will be congested into six months as Caf is moving its calendar from February – November to August – May. The last five months, from January-May, in the championsh­ip race will separate the boys from the men given the increased workload it will come with. Sundowns normally start slow and gain momentum as the season goes on.

“It’s a marathon! You can sprint first, be ahead and then someone passes you along the way. It’s a marathon. We know the marathon. We’ve been doing this Comrades for the last four years,” Mosimane said. “Normally we don’t start very well. You’ve got to know what you want. What’s important to us is the Champions League and the league. Those are the two major trophies. But you can’t say that you don’t want the MTN8 or the Telkom Knockout, you’ve got to try.

“Player, squad, game and training management will be crucial. It’s small components that people don’t see, but could destroy your season if you don’t manage them well. We’ve seen people going all the way in the Champions League and Confederat­ion Cup, and they come back home and they don’t have the legs. It’s a marathon. It needs experience and we have the experience.”

Sundowns are competing in the group stage of the Champions League for a third year in a row. The Brazilians host AS TogoPort on Friday at the Lucas Moripe Stadium looking to make up for their slow start in the competitio­n. Mosimane’s men have collected just two points from their first two games. What has kept them in the race is that just three points separate them with Wydad Casablanca and Horoya who sit in first and second places respective­ly in Group C.

So with that in mind, is it then not better for Sundowns to improve on their slow start in the league so that they have breathing space by the time fixtures start piling up – especially since they’re still in the Champions League and will return there, meaning their load is bigger?

“So what you are saying to me is that I must sprint in a marathon? And then what happens if I lose all the energy along the way and someone comes, laughs at me and then passes me? I don’t know if I want to do that,” Mosimane said. “I prefer to gain momentum with time. That’s the best thing. But it doesn’t mean that you aren’t going to challenge for anything that’s in front of you. The league is 30 games. The Champions League is a long way.”

The Togolese champions arrived in SA on Monday to familiaris­e themselves with the conditions for the Brazilians’ must-win match after losing 1-0 in Lome last week.

“This means now we must win our home games (against AS Togo-Port on Friday and Horoya on August 28),” Mosimane said. “If you don’t win your home games, then it’s done. We are under pressure and we have to win our home games.”

 ??  ?? POINTING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION: Pitso Mosimane believes player, squad, game and training management will be crucial during the new campaign.
POINTING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION: Pitso Mosimane believes player, squad, game and training management will be crucial during the new campaign.

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