Cape Times

Furman: Family played an important role for SuperSport

- Njabulo Ngidi

JOHANNESBU­RG: Dean Furman had extra motivation to help SuperSport United avoid finishing 15th in the PSL last season.

“The date of the playoffs clashed with my wedding day,” Furman said. “It was a tough and stressful time because of what was going on with the team. But luckily for me my wife, Natasha, was very supportive throughout everything.

“She was understand­ing and we played it by ear. We didn’t postpone the wedding. We just hoped for the best and luckily the boys pulled through and we avoided the playoffs.”

That meant the Matsatsant­sa captain could tie the knot on May 27 with no interrupti­ons or worrying about the status of the Tshwane club. Furman’s wedding offered him a reprieve after a stressful season that started on a positive note.

“Last season brought mixed feelings to us,” Furman said. “We won the MTN8 and reached the final of the Caf Confederat­ion Cup. But we also struggled towards the end and found ourselves in an unfamiliar position. That’s where family played an important role.

“It was important to have a good support structure at home to weather the storm. I had that with Natasha and I am sure that the boys also had that which is what helped us finish strong.”

Matsatsant­sa have started their pre-season training with the aim of improving on the shortfalls of last season and building on what they did right. Kaitano Tembo has been putting the players through their paces in preparatio­ns for the new season which starts next month.

It’s still unclear whether SuperSport will start the new season with Tembo at the helm or they will hire another coach. Next year will be Tembo’s 20th year at SuperSport. The players are fond of him which is why he was able to steady the ship after coach Eric Tinkler’s resignatio­n while Matsatsant­sa were in free fall.

“Obviously we would like to forget the bad that happened last season but there were also some positives that we need to take to the new season,” Furman said. “We had an amazing run in the Confederat­ion Cup. That campaign strengthen­ed the bond and our mental strength because of the things that we had to overcome.

“We need to adopt that mindset. We didn’t suddenly become a bad team overnight. It’s just that we were not prepared for what came after the Confederat­ion Cup. We were drained after going all the way to the final and then we found ourselves having to play catch up in the league. It was difficult and that’s why we found ourselves in the position we were in towards the end of the season.”

SuperSport haven’t done much business in this transfer window. The Tshwane side still have a decent squad that can challenge for honours with a good balance between experience and youth. Their biggest “buy” so far is the return of Kamohelo Mahlatsi from his loan spell at Ubuntu Cape Town.

 ??  ?? DEAN FURMAN: ‘We didn’t suddenly become a bad team’
DEAN FURMAN: ‘We didn’t suddenly become a bad team’

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