Soccer Laduma

Experts: Give Chiefs players a break

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A lot has been said about Kaizer Chiefs players and their quality or lack thereof in recent seasons due to inconsiste­nt results and trophy drought. But experts have a different view on the situation. Amakhosi last tasted cup success in 2015 when they won the league under Stuart Baxter during his first spell. With the team now at risk of clocking a decade without winning a trophy, there have been growing concerns among all those associated with the club about the dropping standards. In most instances when fingers had to be pointed regarding the worrying situation, players and coaches have been on the receiving end, but experts believe that sometimes the blame isn’t justifiabl­e. With the 2023/24 season having entered the last quarter, Amakhosi are holding on with interim coach Cavin Johnson in charge just to finish the campaign, with the club expected to undergo coaching changes before the next campaign arrives. The Siya crew spoke to various influentia­l figures in the industry about Chiefs’ downward spiral, and what could be the cause for it.

With Kaizer Chiefs heading for another trophyless season after being knocked out of this year’s Nedbank Cup in the round of 32 by Motsepe Foundation Championsh­ip strugglers Milford FC, experts believe that it is time for the club’s struggles to be looked at beyond the field of play.

Going into their match against Richards Bay FC on Sunday, the team has won only once in their last nine matches, and sources believe that players take the blame unnecessar­ily sometimes for the underwhelm­ing results.

Having started the season with Molefi Ntseki in charge, who was later replaced by Cavin Johnson on an interim basis due to disappoint­ing results, the Soweto giants have seen slow progress despite the coaching changes, while sources have indicated that there could be more to the problem than meets the eye.

“In talking about Chiefs’ problems, I would like people to move away from thinking that the team doesn’t have good players. That should stop. Those players at Chiefs are good but there’s just something that the club might not be doing right to make them click and perform to the required standards. Most of those players were signed as stars in their teams and were performing, and they can’t be bad players overnight. We do understand about the pressure of playing for a big club and all that as opposed to playing for the smaller clubs that some of them come from, but still their quality can’t just diminish like that,” said an expert who spoke to Soccer Laduma on condition of anonymity.

Another source is of the view that the Glamour Boys’ situation is made more complicate­d by archrivals Orlando Pirates doing well.

“It’s always worrying when Pirates are doing well and Chiefs who are their rivals aren’t doing well because that adds pressure to them. Chiefs are struggling and serious interventi­on is needed for the team. I can go as far as mentioning that saying they are struggling is an understate­ment, they are more than struggling. It’s a chaos,” he said.

“You can’t be dropping points against almost all the teams like that, that’s not good and I refuse to believe that it’s a problem of the players. It’s not like they don’t have good players, Chiefs do have good players in their current squad,” he added.

“You can take those players at Chiefs to another team, and they will perform. Those players can contest for league titles. Most of those guys did well in their previous teams, and why can’t they perform, suddenly? Njabulo Ngcobo was the PSL Defender of the Season, do you want to tell me that now he isn’t good enough? (Christian) Saile came highly recommende­d, having done well at his previous club in Zambia (Nchanga Rangers), has he become a bad player suddenly? It can’t be,” the source concluded.

A third source went as far as comparing Chiefs players to their counterpar­ts at defending champions Mamelodi Sundowns.

“Look at Sundowns, only (Peter) Shalulile (when on form) and (Lucas) Ribeiro Costa are regular goal scorers if you are talking about the strikers, and Chiefs have a better striking force, in my opinion, if they were being used to their strengths and effectivel­y. Even in midfield, Chiefs have some of the best players in the likes of (Edson) Castillo, whom I think is very good, (Yusuf) Maart who is very good, and even (Siyethemba) Sithebe is good. The youngsters that Chiefs have been promoting are good, and as to why they aren’t shining, I don’t really know. It’s a problem. Also, Chiefs have some of the best defenders in the league. You cannot tell me that (Edmilson) Dove is a bad player, or (Sifiso) Hlanti, Ngcobo, (Thatayaone) Ditlhokwe, (Given) Msimango, (Zitha) Kwinika, (Reeve) Frosler, (Dillan) Solomons, and all these guys… you can’t tell me they are bad players. Give the players a break, and look elsewhere to point fingers,” concluded the source.

The last expert pointed at coaching as one of the possible reasons for the team’s disappoint­ing results.

“Chiefs do have good players and it’s in the coaching side of things that the team needs fixing. You watch Chiefs these days and it’s not difficult to see that the team is struggling with almost everything they try. They struggle with ball possession, counteratt­ack, low block defending, pressing, and almost everything, like I say. For me as a coach, seeing the team in that state tells me that there must be a lot of things that aren’t being done correctly in training. It is difficult to understand how the team is trying to play. In football, everything starts at training, and you master everything in training, chances are you will get it right also come match day. It can’t be difficult to fix the problem at Chiefs with the players they have,” the anonymous coach said.

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