Cape Argus

Bafana coach: Will Safa get it right?

- ASHFAK ashfak.mohamed@inl.co.za

THE announceme­nt of the dates for the Fifa World Cup qualifiers last week would normally bring great excitement for any football fan, but it had the opposite effect on me.

As a proud South African, I will never forget the 2010 tournament in this country. I can still hear the slogan ‘Feel it, it is here!’, and how the crowds streamed through the Fan Walks to the Cape Town Stadium.

But here we sit, Mzansi, in ‘sak en as’ (sackcloth and ashes) as they say, after Bafana Bafana failed to even qualify for the Africa Cup of Nations in Cameroon.

So, to even contemplat­e another qualifying campaign is tough for an SA fan. Bafana have now missed out on three of the last four Afcon tournament­s, with 2019 in Egypt the exception.

Their World Cup record is even worse. Apart from 2010 as hosts, Bafana have only made it through qualifying twice, for the 1998 and 2002 events.

Clive Barker was in charge when Phil Masinga rifled home that goal against Congo, but ‘The Dog’ was soon pressurise­d to resign after a difficult Confederat­ions Cup for eccentric Frenchman Philippe Troussier (with Jomo Sono as caretaker coach taking the team to the 1998 Afcon final), and it ended in disaster at France ’98.

Carlos Queiroz took over in 2000 from Trott Moloto and steered Bafana through qualifying for the 2002 tournament in Japan and South Korea, but months before the event, an apparent fall-out with Safa after the Afcon – where South Africa lost in the quarter-finals – saw the Portuguese mentor on his way.

Sono stepped in again as caretaker for the World Cup, where SA had a win, loss and draw.

There have been rumours in the last week that Queiroz could be on his way back for a second stint at Bafana following Molefi Ntseki’s sacking. But whoever Safa appoint, will they get it right?

There were questions over Ntseki from the start due to his lack of exposure at the level of club football.

He was primarily given the job after guiding the SA Under-17 side to their World Cup, but the fact that big local candidates such as Gavin Hunt and Benni McCarthy were overlooked meant that Ntseki was put under enormous pressure immediatel­y. He was rightly let go after Bafana missed out on Afcon qualificat­ion.

Pitso Mosimane has had enormous success on the African continent with Mamelodi Sundowns and now Al Ahly, and should be considered once more, while Herve Renard’s name has also popped up.

But I think the time has come to secure the best possible coaching team if Safa are serious about getting Bafana to Qatar 2022, with the qualifiers starting on the first weekend in June.

How about Queiroz or Renard, Mosimane, Hunt and McCarthy? And no expense should be spared in getting the best coach in place.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa