Daily Dispatch

Celtic’s talisman is real superstar

- By MARK GLEESON

BLOEMFONTE­IN Celtic will play in only their fifth cup final on Saturday when they meet Bidvest Wits in the Telkom Knockout decider in KwaMashu.

But it is their first final that remains the most memorable‚ for launching onto the national conscience a player who would go on to become a superstar in the local game.

Ernest Chirwali‚ as he was called in those days‚ was the orchestral conductor of the Celtic side‚ picking and fetching the ball‚ making telling passes with short bursts of accelerati­on and a unique vision and contributi­ng to the attack with clever late runs into the areas or shots from outside.

His elegance‚ with an upright gait‚ attracted him to fans but in an era of limited television coverage few had a chance to see him outside of Bloemfonte­in.

It was only Celtic’s run to the final of the Mainstay Cup that handed the team a national profile and brought Chirwali to the country’s attention.

Chirwali‚ or Mtawali to give him his real name‚ was among a wave of Malawian internatio­nals who came to South Africa in 1983 in defiance of the sports boycott and whom were immediatel­y banned by Fifa.

He first played under Shakes Mashaba at Welkom Real Hearts but was quickly snapped up by Celtic and became the pivot of an entertaini­ng team packed with foreigners like Eden Katanko‚ Albert Sibiya and Armando Caspar of Mozambique and Ambrose Mosala and Ronnie Malefetsan­e from Lesotho.

Chirwali led the side past league frontrunne­rs Rangers in the quarterfin­als and Moroka Swallows in a home semifinal before going on to Ellis Park to meet upstarts African Wanderers in the decider.

There were some 30 000 on hand that day for a game in which Celtic took a third minute lead through Jacob Pilane but surrendere­d the advantage early in the second half to Dees Abdul. — DDC

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