Daily Dispatch

Ambitious Cape Town City snap up internatio­nal striker

- MARC STRYDOM

Cape Town City snatched the signature of pacey‚ mercurial Bafana Bafana striker Tokelo Rantie in Friday night’s final hours of the Premier Soccer League’s transfer window deadline day.

The signing of 27-year-old forward Rantie from Genclerbir­ligi in Turkey completes a largely torrid period for the striker in six-and-a-half years spent in Europe.

It also again signals the intent of Benni McCarthy’s City‚ who have made characteri­stically ambitious signings ahead of the 2018-19 season.

Rantie’s acquisitio­n by City‚ and Mamelodi Sundowns snatching up Phakamani Mahlambi from Al Ahly‚ were the two coup signings made ahead of the midnight deadline on Friday night.

Orlando Pirates also transferre­d their Ghanaian forward Bernard Morrison‚ who arrived with much fanfare in July 2016 but has largely disappoint­ed at the Buccaneers‚ to Democratic Republic of Congo club DC Motema Pembe.

The PSL reportedly also confirmed that Kaizer Chiefs’ Madagascan target Andriamira­do “Dax” Andrianari­manana was not registered.

Reports are that Dax’s previous club‚ Fosa Juniors‚ are taking their fight to be compensate­d for the player to Fifa.

Chiefs say they signed Dax believing there was no need to negotiate with Fosa because they had no formal contract with the player.

Rantie becomes City’s seventh signing after Dutch goalkeeper Peter Leeuwengbu­rgh‚ attackers Gift Links‚ Riyaad Norodien and Siphelele Mthembu‚ and defenders Keano Cupido and Ivorian Kouassi Kouadja.

The forward – capable of massive destructio­n with his pace‚ but who in Europe was let down by his at times wild finishing skills and could go for months without scoring goals – will take some time to reach match fitness having not played for 10 months at Genclerbir­ligi.

Sundowns are believed to have paid R13.2-million for Mahlambi. Of Ahly’s income‚ R5.9-million must apparently be paid to his first profession­al club‚ Bidvest Wits‚ as a sell-on fee from the Clever Boys’ contract with the Egyptian club.

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