The Independent on Saturday

Kekana up for Downs

Out to make amends

- NJABULO NGIDI

HLOMPHO Kekana describes as heartbreak­ing what Bidvest Wits denied him last season, which is why he is driven to make amends for that and help Mamelodi Sundowns make history.

The 32-year-old has already etched his name in the Brazilians’ history books by becoming the club’s first captain to lead them to Caf Champions League glory in 2016.

But Kekana is yet to lift a domestic trophy as Sundowns’ captain since taking over from Ramwahlwe Mphahlele two years ago. Last season he came close to doing so but Sundowns fell at the last hurdle in the Absa Premiershi­p race, allowing Wits’ to swoop in and win the league for the first time in almost a century.

As the Clever Boys were lifting the trophy on the last day of the season, coach Pitso Mosimane vowed Sundowns would reclaim it.

The Brazilians are five matches away from achieving that. One of those matches is against Wits today at Loftus Versfeld (6pm kick-off).

These two clubs have played only one draw in their last 10 meetings and in the last decade Wits have only won one match in Pretoria. “Statistics don’t mean much at this stage of the season,” Kekana said. “Every team that you play against is fighting for something which makes it tricky.

“But with that said, if you don’t play your normal game and if you don’t play according to plan, you will not get the positive result that you want.

“Tactics don’t work much when we are playing against Wits because it’s very personal. Wits fight. They don’t want to give us space to breathe. We are anticipati­ng a difficult match.”

A win for Sundowns will give them a six-point lead at the summit with four matches to go. It would mean even more to get that cushion at the expense of Wits who pipped Sundowns for the league title due to the Clever Boys’ strong finishing while the Chloorkop-based side registered four draws in their last five matches in the last campaign.

“We are in a good space and we have created breathing space between us and our rivals,” Kekana said. “It’s a stress-reliever that we have our destiny in our hands. If you look at the way things are at the moment, we are okay. But we need to win matches to stretch the gap.

“It was very sad when we lost the league. It was heartbreak­ing because we thought we deserved the trophy last season. But it didn’t work out that way. We dropped crucial points towards the end of the season.

“This time around we want to try and rectify the mistakes that we committed last season so that we make amends both for ourselves and our fans.”

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