Cape Times

Four areas of concern for Ajax

- Rodney Reiners

AS Ajax Cape Town head into Saturday’s PSL fixture against Baroka FC at the Peter Mokaba Stadium in Polokwane on Saturday afternoon (3pm kickoff), there is a lot for head coach Stanley Menzo to ponder.

While Ajax come off a 2-0 win over Polokwane City at Cape Town Stadium last week, Menzo was far from happy. It was only a marginal secondhalf improvemen­t which allowed the Cape side to register the win. In truth, if they were playing any other team, the result could have been markedly different. It was a disappoint­ing performanc­e from Ajax, especially in a tepid, woeful first half.

So, with an in-form Baroka looming, and a long season still ahead, here are four areas of concern for Menzo to focus on: WHERE IS THE LEADERSHIP? There was a lasting, inspiratio­nal image at halftime during the Polokwane match last week. It was goalless, the match was a soporific affair, and a soulless Ajax team was trooping off. But then new central defender Mario Booysen kicked into gear – he gathered the players around him on the field and gave them a “hairdryer” that Sir Alex Ferguson would have been proud of. Booysen is back in the Mother City after a sixyear hiatus, and was playing just his second game for Ajax since his return as part of the Rivaldo Coetzee-to-Sundowns deal. He is not the captain, but so irate was he at the listlessne­ss of his teammates that he felt the need to remind them of their responsibi­lity as players. This is what Ajax need, and they need a helluva lot more of this type of spirit and attitude. They need more players to take the initiative, like Booysen did, and they need the squad to man up and perform with courage and determinat­ion.

WHERE IS THE HUNGER?

Last week, against Polokwane, it was particular­ly the complete lack of energy and enthusiasm which characteri­sed the team’s worst moments. Yes, they had plenty of possession, but it was as if they were playing walking football – there was no intensity, and there was little desire and hunger about the manner in which they went about their business. This was indeed worrying for Menzo, which was why he had a stern chat to the players at halftime, especially with regard to the lethargy of their play. Football is not just a game of skill and tactics, more importantl­y it demands animation, verve and dynamism. It’s an area in which Ajax are falling short.

WHERE IS THE MOVEMENT?

There’s a popular adage in football that the man in possession of the ball is not all that important, it’s the players off the ball who are far more crucial when trying to break down the opposition. In keeping with this, offensive play is only effective when there is movement off the ball, when teammates shift positions and create space for the man in possession to pass the ball around intelligen­tly. Alas, this is another area of concern for Ajax. There are far too many players ball-watching, they are too static, with the result that the man on the ball often looks an utter idiot: simply because he has nobody to pass to. One of the key successes of the “Ajax Way” is deft and clever movement off the ball – yet, at the moment, it is absent from the Urban Warriors. WHERE IS THE BELIEF? When a youngster decides he has a bit of football ability, his first objective is to exhibit it on a grander stage. He wants to be noticed, he wants to show people what he can do. So he takes his talent, combines it with self-belief, and confidentl­y displays it on a football field. He controls, passes, darts around, communicat­es, shoots, and becomes an integral part of contributi­ng to a team as a whole. In a nutshell, that is the definition of being a footballer. At Ajax, though, this confidence and self-belief are non-existent. In essence, there are far too many players freezing on match-day; they are dead-scared of making mistakes, which is why they are hiding from the ball. Perhaps, it’s time for the Ajax squad to remember why they got into football in the first place, so they can re-discover the unabashed joy of playing, and then regain that missing confidence and self-belief.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa