Cape Times

Ertugral bringing in new vigour at Ajax

- Rodney Reiners

MUHSIN ERTUGRAL’S quirky love affair with Ajax Cape Town is already having a positive effect. After months of lethargy and aimlessnes­s, the presence of the 59-yearold Turkish coach, now in his fourth spell at the Cape club, has injected some energy and urgency into a team struggling to reach its potential.

Now, with Ajax on the up and improving with every game, it ratchets up the anticipati­on for Saturday’s derby encounter against neighbours Cape Town City at Cape Town Stadium (3.30pm kickoff).

There is certainly a new vigour at Ajax. Ertugral has introduced his inimitable coaching style at training sessions, he has brought in fresh ideas and innovative tactics, and, suddenly, there’s a buzz and excitement around a club that has been in the doldrums for so long.

Ertugral is not everybody’s cup of tea. He’s unconventi­onal, he’s unpredicta­ble and, at times, he’s volatile. But there’s no doubting his coaching pedigree and tactical nous. He’s a deep thinker and an astute scholar of the game. Everything he does, on training and from the bench on match day, has a motivation; his decisions are always the result of deep tactical thought in a bid to make his team perform better.

A perfect example of this was on show against Platinum Stars last Friday. With Ajax 1-0 down and battling to break down the opposition’s stubborn, organised defence, Ertugral seemingly made a baffling change at the start of the second half when he substitute­d promising young striker Fagrie Lakay and brought on midfielder Ndiviwe Mdabuka. But there was a method to his madness – and Ajax went on to win 3-1 as they overwhelme­d Platinum Stars in the final 20 minutes.

Ertugral gave some insight into his decision: “I thought in the first half the crosses weren’t coming in and the work in the last third wasn’t good enough.

“Mosa (Lebusa, left-back) is our out play, we needed to get him in the game, but he couldn’t get out, so we changed things at halftime. I took off a striker (Lakay) and brought on a midfielder (Mdabuka) and people probably thought ‘what’s he doing?’ But the point was that we needed to free up Mosa, so we played 3-5-2 in the second half, changed the pattern, and I have to take my hat off to the boys … they played Platinum off the park in the last 20 minutes, it was marvellous to watch.”

Ertugral handed a debut to new signing Tendai Ndoro, and the 32-year-old Zimbabwean striker duly scored on his first appearance since arriving at the Mother City PSL club.

“Ndoro is a player who is always in an angle in the build-up process, which is why he is able to open up the lines for himself and other players,” said Ertugral. “Going forward, we have about seven or eight pass patterns that we use, and Ndoro is aware of them. We still need to perfect the patterns, but Ndoro is going to do well for us.”

Ndoro will, of course, be crucial in the Cape derby against City on Saturday.

But, needless to say, Ertugral is looking forward to the clash. Not only has he been involved in many a Soweto derby between Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates – but, with Ajax not having won a match in this new Cape rivalry as yet, he is determined to change his club’s fortunes.

“I love the derbies – and hopefully we can bring the vibe and build this one in Cape Town too. City are playing good football and I have great memories of some of their players from my time with them at Mpumalanga Black Aces. It will be a good game, but I am confident we can pull it off,” said Ertugral.

 ?? Picture: BACKPAGEPI­X ?? The Cobras will field three black African batsmen in Temba Bavuma, Simon Khomari and Aviwe Mgijima against the Knights today.
Picture: BACKPAGEPI­X The Cobras will field three black African batsmen in Temba Bavuma, Simon Khomari and Aviwe Mgijima against the Knights today.
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