Cape Times

FOR AFANA BAFANA COME SHOW YOUR LOVE

- Mazola Molefe

JOHANNESBU­RG: The tickets sales have been abysmal to say the least, 2018 World Cup hopes hang by the thinnest of threads and Bafana Bafana take on Group D leaders Burkina Faso at FNB Stadium tomorrow afternoon (3pm kickoff) looking for redemption.

It’s the unwanted script for national team coach Stuart Baxter as he faces what is way more than a mammoth task to get his charges to the global showpiece in Russia next year.

Bafana are bottom of the group with just a single point from three qualifiers and have done very little to inspire confidence in the lead up to a must-win encounter against Paulo Duarte’s Stallions, who squeezed in a late goal to salvage a draw in Ouagadougo­u when the two teams met this time last year.

Shakes Mashaba was Bafana coach then and had seemingly made sure Bafana got off to a decent start on the road to the World Cup, that belief grew even more with the 2-1 win over favourites Senegal at Peter Mokaba Stadium a month after the clash away to Burkina Faso.

The Senegal win has since been annulled by Fifa, who say they have concrete evidence supporting an allegation that the match was fixed and ordered a replay scheduled for next month. Referee Joseph Lamptey was also handed a lifetime ban.

Baxter arrived on the scene two matches (at the time) into these World Cup qualifiers and began gearing up for the backto-back home and away fixtures against lowly Cape Verde. But before that, the coach led Bafana to a 2-0 win against Nigeria in Uyo in their opening game of the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations.

With Cape Verde next, the expectatio­n was that those two games would be relatively easy for Bafana, and that the six points would all but guarantee their place in Russia.

But the islanders were shock winners in both games instead.

Now Baxter and his charges have it all to do – the permutatio­ns still give them a slim chance, but the coach, as hopeful as he continues to be, will know that it is going to take something special to qualify for the World Cup.

In an attempt to shake things up following the horror of losing twice in four days to The Blue Sharks last month, Baxter rang the changes in his squad. A notable omission was that of striker Tokelo Rantie, who scored away in Praia and is Bafana’s leading goal scorer with 13 goals from 40 internatio­nal games.

Baxter said the player has been inactive because of a three-match suspension in Turkey and has been used mostly as a wide player and therefore would not be ideal for the Burkina Faso clash.

So, young Phakamani Mahlambi and Dino Ndlovu were the two significan­t inclusions upfront. But will they deliver if Baxter gambles by selecting them?

“It’s obviously a big game and there’s a lot of pressure,” Mahlambi said this week. “But we don’t have to take that into our minds. It’s a game of football, sometimes you win and sometimes you lose. I think we need to have a positive mind and for sure we will win the game.” Not that convincing, sadly. And in a do-or-die match at a venue that hosted the 2010 World Cup final, Bafana will be desperate for redemption against a Burkina Faso side that have said all week they feel as if their qualificat­ion for Russia – what would be a first for their country – is almost palpable.

All this, possibly, in front of a mediocre crowd as fans refuse to put their bums on seats.

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 ?? Picture: BACKPAGEPI­X ?? HAPPY PLACE: Phakamani Mahlambi believes South Africa’s positive mindset will see them beat Burkina Faso tomorrow.
Picture: BACKPAGEPI­X HAPPY PLACE: Phakamani Mahlambi believes South Africa’s positive mindset will see them beat Burkina Faso tomorrow.

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