Daily Maverick

Marred by missed chances

Broos’s Bafana story is far from over after the team’s heroics at the continenta­l tournament

- By Yanga Sibembe DM

Belgian coach Hugo Broos has no plans to end his Bafana Bafana love affair any time soon. When in May 2021 the South African Football Associatio­n (Safa) announced Broos as the next man to attempt to resurrect a team that was once one of the most respected and influentia­l on the continent, there was some uncertaint­y. Along with many questions.

A few months before Broos’s appointmen­t, Bafana Bafana had again failed to qualify for the Africa Cup of Nations (Afcon), this time under the guidance of Molefi Ntseki.

Ntseki had taken over from Stuart Baxter, who quit the Bafana job in 2019, not long after Bafana Bafana were ousted from the quarterfin­als of the 2019 Afcon. Baxter hinted that a lack of support from Safa’s hierarchy was his reason for leaving.

“A coach must have confidence that his input can help the project move forward and, after the Afcon, my belief in the process has weakened considerab­ly,” said Baxter at the press conference at which he announced his departure from Bafana Bafana.

Safa chose his successor, Ntseki, because he was a local. Not just any local, but one who had worked his way up as the associatio­n’s employee for much of his coaching career.

He had been assistant coach in the under-20 and under-23 teams before becoming Baxter’s assistant in the national team. He also headed Amajimbos, SA’S under-17 team. But he had little experience at this high level. Safa trusted him, though.

When Bafana Bafana failed to qualify for the 2021 Afcon in Cameroon, however, Safa cut ties with Ntseki, who was Bafana’s 18th full-time coach since SA’S readmissio­n to world football in 1992.

It was another botched Afcon qualificat­ion campaign. They had not qualified for Afcon in 2010, 2012 or 2017.

The bold and the brash

Enter Broos. Who exactly is he? Coaches such as Benni Mccarthy, Gavin Hunt, Pitso Mosimane and even Hervé Renard had been linked to the job. Why not them?

Why a 69-year-old, in the twilight of his coaching career, when there were so many young and vibrant choices? Public perception was that the Belgian was just using South Africa as a way to make some easy money before he retired. As time has proven, this was far from the reality.

“If Bafana Bafana don’t qualify for the 2023 Afcon, you can kill me,” bellowed Broos boldly during the official announceme­nt that he was the next coach.

Three years after that seemingly ludicrous statement, made more absurd by Bafana Bafana’s shyness in qualifying for major tournament­s, South Africa reached the semifinals of Afcon for the first time in 24 years.

They were unfortunat­e to be bundled out of the 2023 Afcon, hosted by Côte d’ivoire, by Nigeria, who won 4-2 on penalties.

At that introducti­on to the media in 2021, Broos showed he had done his homework on South Africa. He said they had the tendency to concede first and have to chase the game.

Being on the back foot early on made South Africa vulnerable because of the ageing squad. Which meant they conceded goals cheaply. This was Broos’s assessment, and he wanted to change this.

He did just that, as evidenced by the fact that Bafana Bafana kept four clean sheets from their five games preceding the semifinal loss to Nigeria at Afcon.

A new broom

Once appointed, Broos did away with players who were 30 years old or over, such as Themba Zwane, Thulani Serero and Andile Jali. Even skipper Thulani Hlatshwayo was not spared by Broos, who was on a mission to rebuild South African football.

On a grand tour around South Africa’s stadiums – trying to watch all the teams – he identified players he felt would pull in the same direction as him.

Broos, alongside his assistant and former Bafana

Bafana midfielder Helman

Mkhalele, worked through trial and error as they expanded their pool of players.

“When I came to South Africa, first of all, I was a little bit surprised that there were so many old players in the team. So, we had to change [this],” Broos recalled after his team’s loss to Nigeria.

“I had a lot of critics… Because I took players not only from the big teams, but also from the little clubs… [But] we needed some time. It was nearly one year later that we found what we needed. We also changed the style of South African football. We tried to play more direct.”

Once his core squad was crafted, Broos realised he was missing something, a creative force who would be the bright spark that complement­ed Bafana Bafana’s organisati­onal quality. He brought back Zwane in late 2022, who scored a brace to mark his return.

In Côte d’ivoire, the 34-year-old was exceptiona­l. “We know Themba is a very good player. In the beginning with South Africa, he wasn’t in the selection. But I explained that it was his age, we were building a new team at that moment,” Broos told idiski Times in 2023.

“For me, it was important to [explore] what young players we had. But I have to confirm that, once Themba came here, the way of playing changed.”

When the coach raves so much about you, it’s clear you are firmly in his plans. Broos trusts Zwane wholeheart­edly, despite his age. Just as Safa trusted Broos, who won Afcon with Cameroon in 2017, despite his age.

World Cup push

After this mesmerisin­g run at Afcon, Bafana Bafana will now focus their energy on the qualifiers for the 2026 World Cup. The South Africans are grouped with Nigeria, Lesotho, Zimbabwe, Rwanda and Benin. To book their ticket to the World Cup, which they last appeared in back in 2010, they must finish at the summit of their group.

They have already played two games, beating Benin 2-1 before being downed 2-0 by Rwanda. In June, Bafana will have an opportunit­y to claim some sort of revenge over Nigeria for their Afcon heartbreak.

Plus three points, when the two teams face off in what will be the latest round of qualificat­ion matches for the upcoming global football showpiece.

Broos plans to be at that tournament, which is being co-hosted by the US, Canada and Mexico. The Belgian’s contract runs until 2026.

“As long as things are going the way they are now, why should I stop? I like my job. I like football. So, we will see what the future will bring,” said Broos.

 ?? ?? From left: Mothobi Mvala challenges Nigeria’s Victor Osimhen as Bafana goalkeeper Ronwen Williams looks on during the semifinal on 7 February. Photo: Djaffar Ladjal/backpagepi­x
From left: Mothobi Mvala challenges Nigeria’s Victor Osimhen as Bafana goalkeeper Ronwen Williams looks on during the semifinal on 7 February. Photo: Djaffar Ladjal/backpagepi­x
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 ?? ?? Coach Hugo Broos. Photo: Backpagepi­x
Coach Hugo Broos. Photo: Backpagepi­x

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