The Independent on Saturday

Gavin stays in hunt for glory

Wits coach says players need to be better and must go back to basics

- MAZOLA MOLEFE

WHEN a Premier Soccer League coach is feeling the heat, there are obvious trigger words to his plight.

Pressure is the most common one, but Bidvest Wits mentor Gavin Hunt has hardly used any of them so far this season.

Even as the Absa Premiershi­p defending champions slumped to their fifth defeat of the campaign after nine matches on Wednesday night, the three-time title winner was visibly irritated with yet another poor result, but he’s hardly looked a man desperatel­y holding on to his job.

“South African football is crazy,” Hunt said this week as he prepares to take on log leaders Baroka FC in a Telkom Knockout quarterfin­al cup tie tonight.

“Every week it (the call for coaches to get the sack) changes. But for me, it’s about focusing on what I do, how I prepare the team on the training ground and what’s available.

“You have to look at this thing holistical­ly – from top to bottom. The problem is expectatio­ns have been raised here because we won the league and cup double last season.

“We are motivated, of course. But I don’t want to be called a motivator. That means I am not a good coach. We are getting paid here and playing for our lives.”

Hunt has also received a vote of confidence from club management, being labelled as a record breaker for ending a 96-year title drought at the oldest club in the country.

For his colleagues, any statements from the hierarchy about job security is often seen as the dreaded vote of confidence, which often means the coach is on his way out.

But it is far from being the case at Wits, and you get that sense when Hunt, extremely moody after defeat and incredibly pleasant when you catch him at the club’s training grounds, speaks.

“I am disappoint­ed,” he said when asked about the inconsiste­nt results, which have led to the Clever Boys sheepishly surrenderi­ng their MTN8 title and currently lying second from bottom of the league table.

“But football is not about getting mad and disappoint­ed, just get even. There is no need for me to throw my toys out the cot. I just need to make sure I put it right. The players have got to understand that they’ve got to be better. I think we’ve got to go back to basics pretty much in every position. Last year I thought we were the best team without the ball. This year we are not very good without it, typically. If you want to do anything, you need to be good without the ball. That is the difference.”

Hunt also has injuries to key players, but in this interview he hardly used that as an excuse, admitting that Wits simply haven’t been good enough.

“Yes, because of injuries we couldn’t integrate the new players properly. So we had a problem from the start, but the thing is we’ve just been a yard off the pace,” he explained. “Do you know what I mean by that?

“The difference is a yard or two. The leftback is giving the right-winger five yards instead of three. Does that make sense? He does that and the centrehalf also does the same, and the next minute the opposition is having a shot at goal, like what happened against Chippa United (2-0 defeat at home).

“Our centre forward lost the ball on the halfway line and what happened? The centreback didn’t go tight where he should have, and the boy (Samuel Julies) turned and goal.”

Hunt is sure to tinker with his line-up for tonight’s cup clash at Bidvest Stadium and although the topic around what has gone wrong has probably come up in conversati­ons with his bosses, there seems to be no suggestion he is vacating the post anytime soon.

 ?? PICTURE: EPA-EFE/ZIPI ?? TAXING TIME: Jose Mourinho arrives at the examining magistrate’s court number 4 in Madrid yesterday. The current Manchester United coach is accused of a tax fraud of €3.3 million (R46.2m) by Spanish prosecutor­s investigat­ing his time as Real Madrid’s...
PICTURE: EPA-EFE/ZIPI TAXING TIME: Jose Mourinho arrives at the examining magistrate’s court number 4 in Madrid yesterday. The current Manchester United coach is accused of a tax fraud of €3.3 million (R46.2m) by Spanish prosecutor­s investigat­ing his time as Real Madrid’s...

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