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Bafana’s World Cup hopes sink further as Safa accept Fifa decision

- MAZOLA MOLFE IN JOHANNESBU­RG

DID THE South African Football Associatio­n (Safa) cowardly give up without even putting up a fight?

It appeared so yesterday when the organisati­on’s head Danny Jordaan, flanked by his deputy presidents Elvis Shishana and Lucas Nhlapho and lawyer Norman Arendse, who had been leading the charge last week in challengin­g

Fifa on its decision that Bafana Bafana should replay their 2018 World Cupqualifi­er against Senegal, sheepishly accepted their fate.

The order for a rematch by the world governing body last Wednesday had been met with shock and dismay by Safa, Bafana fans and the Burkina Faso Football Federation, who felt the pronouncem­ent would impact their chances of qualifying for Russia next year given that they were in pole position alongside Cape Verde in Group D.

“The informatio­n we now have has been classified as highly confidenti­al, but what I can say is that there is now evidence that the game was targeted for manipulati­on and the score could have gone either way,” said Arendse, Safa’s voice last week in the midst of confusion and panic as the national team’s hopes of playing at the World Cup took a big hit.

Fifa had since issued a lifetime ban to Joseph Lamptey, the Ghanaian referee who was in charge of Bafana’s 2-1 win over Senegal at the Peter Mokaba Stadium in November last year. Arendse (pictured) had told the press six days ago that Safa had a strong case, especially seeing that Fifa had in fact moved quickly to clear South Africa of any wrong-doing in a match that now appears to have been fixed.

But yesterday morning he was singing a different tune – this as a result of an emergency committee meeting in Nasrec the day before, where Premier Soccer League chairman Irvin Khoza was also in attendance. The decision to accept Fifa’s call, the first of its kind in world football, was taken there.

“Fifa paid Ireland $5 million,” said Arendse, referring to the payment that was made as compensati­on to the Irish for missing the 2010 World Cup after striker Thierry Henry’s handball set up France’s winning goal in the play-offs for a place at the global showpiece, which was to be held in South Africa.

There was wild speculatio­n yesterday on whether Fifa could have offered Safa some kind of reimbursem­ent outside the minimum R5 million guaranteed as payback for the costs incurred in planning the Senegal game in Polokwane.

Safa felt taking the moral route, when there were probably grounds to appeal the decision to replay the match in two month’s time, was the easier path.

“We don’t want dirty points,” Arendse said in a complete contrast to his remarks last week when he asked whether Bafana should be punished for an alleged betting syndicate that had nothing to do with them.

“We were unconvince­d by the evidence given to us so far, but what we received lately suggest that the game could have been manipulate­d. But this is not to say it was for Bafana to win. No, the scoreline could have been 2-1 in favou r of Senegal.

“Fifa, through their tracking system, saw a spike when there was a penalty (converted by Bafana captain Thulani Hlatshwayo). Maybe the bets were to see the referee give a penalty, and it didn’t matter who would get it.”

Although Safa have accepted the process and will begin to make arrangemen­ts to host Senegal again not long after Bafana face Burkina Faso at the FNB Stadium on October 8, referee Lamptey is still fighting to clear his name.

“He has appealed through the Swiss courts, but it might be a while before there is an outcome there. Maybe it will affect our replay, maybe it wont,” Arendse said. “What we are still aggrieved about is that there was no due diligence from Fifa. We were not involved in the decision-making process and we believe there were no background checks done on a referee that was not short of controvers­y, and was appointed by Fifa, not Safa.”

Why, then, is Safa throwing in the towel?

@superjourn­o

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