Cape Times

Komphela wants Amakhosi to leave it all on the pitch

- Njabulo Ngidi

JOHANNESBU­RG: Steve Komphela is using psychologi­cal warfare to get his Kaizer Chiefs players psyched up for their must-win Soweto derby against Orlando Pirates at FNB Stadium on Saturday.

Komphela has told his players to give Pirates what Chiefs get from the other 15 teams – heightened focus.

Amakhosi missed an opportunit­y to cut Mamelodi Sundowns’ lead at the summit to just three points when they drew 0-0 with Bloemfonte­in Celtic last Saturday.

The Buccaneers made the most of Sundowns’ slip, jumping from fifth place to second with just four points separating them and the Brazilians. Pirates and Chiefs’ involvemen­t in the league race has added extra spice to an already big match that consistent­ly fills the biggest stadium on the continent.

“A plus in this, which I always say to the players, when people hear about this fixture they immediatel­y go with a marker to say that we are playing Chiefs here or we are playing Pirates here,” Komphela said.

“The level of focus for players when they play against Kaizer Chiefs is so heightened, coaches don’t have too many problems in selecting the playing personnel. They would want to play with broken legs because they want to play this important match. Now I am saying to our players, everybody else looks at Chiefs matches like that (so we must return the favour against (Pirates).

“This is the same way we are looking at the Pirates match, because it is big. The preparatio­ns you go through leading up to the match against Pirates should be the way you prepare consistent­ly because all the other 15 teams prepare like that against us. It is a big week, but I have to be careful because what are you saying about the other weeks?”

Chiefs head into the derby as an underdog of some sort. The Buccaneers have momentum after coming from behind to beat the Chilli Boys 4-2 on Saturday.

Pirates possess a more aggressive attack which knows how to turn it on when they need to. But Chiefs’ advantage is that they have worked together as a unit longer than the Buccaneers, whose coach Milutin Sredojevic only joined the team in August.

Komphela spoke about the Celtic draw as if the team lost. In the greater scheme of things Chiefs did lose because they are still two matches away from catching up with the pacesetter­s instead of making it one game with a three-point gap.

“You would then want them to respond (after dropping points against Celtic),” Komphela said.

“This could be a plus in a way (that we have to react) even though we know it’s not a plus in terms of results. But you could come up from this and drive them to go forward by saying that listen, we have to respond and bounce back. It is a reality that we missed out on an opportunit­y to close the gap by three points.”

 ??  ?? STEVE KOMPHELA: ‘We have to respond’
STEVE KOMPHELA: ‘We have to respond’

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