Daily Dispatch

No end to derby hoodoo

- Another draw as Chiefs fail to beat Pirates again

Kaizer Chiefs’ winless run against Orlando Pirates stretched to 12 matches spanning 1,496 days when they surrendere­d the lead in an often cagey 1-1 Soweto derby draw on Saturday.

Although Chiefs are the most successful South African football club with 53 trophies, they have not defeated their arch domestic rivals in any competitio­n since December 2014.

For much of the 166th clash between the clubs it seemed Chiefs would bury the jinx as they looked sharper and led after 53 minutes through a Daniel Cardoso penalty. But when they cheaply conceded possession in the centre circle with 10 minutes left, Pirates pounced before a sell-out 90,000 crowd at the FNB sta- dium in Soweto.

A quick pass down the middle found Thembinkos­i Lorch and he rounded Chiefs’ debutant goalkeeper Daniel Akpeyi from Nigeria to equalise from a tight angle.

The Premiershi­p draw suited neither the third-placed Pirates nor Chiefs, who are in fifth position, as both teams failed to take full advantage of log-leaders’ Bidvest Wits’ 2-1 loss to Highlands Park.

Pirates are four points behind Wits having played one match less while Chiefs lie nine points adrift of the pacesetter­s having played the same number of games.

Chiefs’ German coach Ernst Middendorp was angry after the derby as he felt the fourtime Premiershi­p champions should have secured maximum points.

“After going ahead, we had chances to double the lead but failed to take them and were eventually punished,” Middendorp said. “We deserved to win this match by at least one goal, possibly two. I fielded a largely young side against opponents competing in the Caf Champions League and they did very well.”

Pirates’ Serb coach Milutin Sredojevic gave a terse “no comment” when asked about the foul that led to the spot-kick Cardoso planted in the corner of the net on 53 minutes.

There appeared to be minimal contact between Chiefs’ star Zimbabwe striker Khama Billiat and Asavela Mbekile before the attacker fell to the ground as if poleaxed.

“It was a ‘chess’ match in which we started sluggishly and gradually improved,” said the coach who joined Pirates after being in charge of Uganda.

“Chiefs were extremely motivated and we had to dig deep and display a lot of character to level the scores.”

Fixtures between Chiefs and Pirates, Al Ahly and Zamalek in Cairo, Raja and Wydad in Casablanca and Mouloudia and USM in Algiers are the biggest local club derbies in Africa by attendance­s.

Gift Motupa gave Wits an early lead as they chase their second Premiershi­p title in three seasons having waited 96 years for the first.

But Namibian Peter Shalulile soon equalised and mid-table Highlands Park won the match through a goal from jet-heeled Mokete Mogaila on 70 minutes.

The title ambitions of fourthplac­e Cape Town City suffered a setback in Durban as they missed a penalty in a 1-0 loss to AmaZulu. –

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES/LEFTY SHIVAMBU ?? CATCH ME IF YOU CAN: Kazier Chiefs’ George Maluleka, left, passes the ball with Mpho Makola of Orlando Pirates in hot pursuit during their Premiershi­p match at the FNB Stadium in Johannesbu­rg on Saturday. The match ended in a draw.
Picture: GALLO IMAGES/LEFTY SHIVAMBU CATCH ME IF YOU CAN: Kazier Chiefs’ George Maluleka, left, passes the ball with Mpho Makola of Orlando Pirates in hot pursuit during their Premiershi­p match at the FNB Stadium in Johannesbu­rg on Saturday. The match ended in a draw.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa