Cape Times

Jordaan wants Baxter to inject some youth into Bafana team

- Mazola Molefe

JOHANNESBU­RG: Safa says it will insist Bafana Bafana coach Stuart Baxter gives more opportunit­ies to young players as part of the way forward following the failure to qualify for next year’s World Cup.

Bafana finished bottom of their group behind Senegal, Burkina Faso and Cape Verde, and throughout the campaign Baxter often went for the tried and tested, saying the developmen­t aspect would have to wait until after he’d secured qualificat­ion. He has come under immense criticism for ignoring players from the junior ranks.

“If you look at the countries that were at the 2014 World Cup, but have failed in getting to next year’s tournament, what they have in common is that they all failed to refresh their squads. The USA, Netherland­s, Italy, Ghana and Algeria did not renew their squads,” said Safa president Danny Jordaan.

“We had a base to renew our squad because we went to the Under-17 and -20 World Cups, then we had a team at the Olympics. None of those players, other than Keagan Dolly, made it into the Bafana team. So renewal of the squad is one of the things I am mentioning in my report. What the coach needs to do is to take the ages of players in the current squad and add four years in terms of Vision 2022. How old will they be then? If you are 34 or 35 now, the question he (Baxter) must ask is that should he play those players for the next three years even though they will be nearly 40? Maybe he should rather start with the one who is 22 and build a team.”

Jordaan also revealed that Baxter will submit his own report on what went wrong in the qualificat­ion campaign – the Scotsman losing four of the five matches he was in charge of and failing, for the second time as Bafana coach, to guide SA to the World Cup.

“We would like to see the squad for 2022 now. Who are those players? And we cannot start with 30-somethings, he just can’t,” Jordaan explained. “A player like (Siphiwe) Tshabalala played in the 2010 World Cup, then he was involved in the qualificat­ion for the 2014 and 2018 World Cup. We are heading to 2022 soon, and we would like to see more of the players from the junior national teams.”

The Safa president also confirmed that with Bafana’s next qualifier now scheduled for September – the first internatio­nal break following the World Cup in Russia – a number of friendlies will be arranged to avoid a lengthy period of inactivity.

“We have to play,” said Jordaan in his reaction to Caf’s decision to move the 2019 Cup of Nations qualifiers in March to later in the year. This is to help African teams which have qualified for the World Cup adequate preparatio­n.

“Uganda has already requested to play us in March. We are going to draw up a programme, and some of the matches will be to celebrate the Nelson Mandela centenary.”

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