The Independent on Saturday

Bilankulu says Arrows will be too sharp for Sundowns

- MINENHLE MKHIZE

MUSA Bilankulu Musa Bilankulu was a member of the Lamontvill­e Golden Arrows side which lifted the MTN 8 trophy in 2009, and the veteran defender-cum-midfielder believes the time has come to rewrite the history books.

It won’t be easy though as they face the reigning PSL champions, Mamelodi Sundowns when they travel to Atteridgev­ille for the quarterfin­al of the MTN 8 (today at 3pm).

But as the old saying goes, if you want to be the best you have to beat the best.

Bilankulu is confident they have what it take to astonish the masses in the football fraternity by beating Masandawan­a in-front of their vibrant and exuberant supporters.

“We are confident we can beat Sundowns. We know it won’t be easy because we are playing one of the best teams in the continent. We have to bring our A-game. They are the favourites and we are the under-dogs.

“So the pressure is on them. No one is giving us a chance but we know that on the day they are beatable. I was the part of the generation which won it in 2009 and it will be nice to win it again in 2018,” an ambitions Bilankulu said as he anticipate­s victory over Sundowns.

Abafana Bes’thende demolished Ajax Cape Town 6-0 in the final back in 2009 at Orlando Stadium.

“The most important thing in this competitio­n is to win the first game. Then you get an advantage of playing home and away in the semi finals and then you are in a final. So, we have to win our first game. If we can beat Sundowns we will have every reason to believe that we can go all the way. Winning in 2009 made a huge impact on the club. We earned and gained respect. Players received national team call-ups and other moved to big clubs,” Bilankulu explained.

Sundowns are oozing confidence. They convincing­ly got the better of Polokwane City away from home on Tuesday after playing out a 1-1 stalemate against Kaizer Chiefs last weekend.

On other hand, Arrows succumbed to a 2-0 loss against Bloemfonte­in Celtic following their impressive start which saw them beating Maritzburg United 2-0 last weekend in the Kwa-Zulu-Natal derby at Harry Gwala Stadium.

“We have let go of the Celtic result. Our focus has now shifted to the Sundowns game. This is a different ball game, we are playing in a cup game. Anyone can beat anyone. We will give it our best shot,” Bilankulu said.

MAZOLA MOLEFE

A CLASH away to Orlando Pirates tonight (Orlando Stadium, 8.30 kick-off) as a first step in their MTN8 title defence couldn’t have come at a better time for SuperSport United.

They must convince everyone again that they remain a strong side despite nearly being relegated last season, coach Kaitano Tembo said this week.

It’s the boardroom points courtesy of the Tendai Ndoro saga that saved face, Matsatsant­sa having flirted with being axed from the Premier Soccer League until the final day of the campaign.

The three points awarded to SuperSport after Ajax Cape Town were punished for the games in which Ndoro, who was ineligible to play, was featured in controvers­ially pushed them into a top eight place.

But the reality is that their season had been awful at best.

“I think all my life as a football person, as a player I have always had to prove myself, that I am still the same player I was yesterday,” said Tembo, who retired in 2006 but has remained within the SuperSport structures ever since and was just last week given a two-year contract as head coach.

“And I think all our players have the same mentality.

“If you have nothing to play for, if the desire and hunger is no longer there, then you better hang them up(the boots).

“But the squad we have, the mentality is that we still have to prove ourselves that we are still the same team we were maybe a year or two ago.”

In that time period, SuperSport were crowned back-toback Nedbank Cup champions and reached the final of the Caf Confederat­ion Cup.

Rewind several years and they made history by winning the PSL title three years in a row between 2008 and 2010.

But last season they almost dropped to the second tier having capitulate­d midway through the campaign, sacked Eric Tinkler and installed Tembo as caretaker coach for the remaining seven matches.

They face a tough test to redeem themselves this weekend against a resurgent Pirates side that is equally looking for silverware.

The Buccaneers have themselves not lived up to expectatio­n and are without a trophy in four years, although they finished runners-up in the Absa Premiershi­p in May.

“It happens in football that you are not always at your best,” said Tembo.

“I remember years back (in 2002), Alex Ferguson announced his retirement, but when he finished the season without the championsh­ip he changed his mind. He wanted to prove that he was still the best. And then when he finally won the league he retired.

“That is the mentality we have. We always want to prove ourselves.”

Pirates coach Micho Sredojevic also has a huge weight of responsibi­lity now that he was given some sort of free pass in his first season back at the club.

While missing out on all domestic competitio­ns a year ago was ignored to give him time to rebuild, the circumstan­ce will be completely different this time around.

“If you remember, we called last season the ‘soul-healing season’ and now that the soul has been healed we know that without food it cannot go on,” he said.

“Yes it will be tough, but from the mental, fitness, physical and tactical point of view we are looking at this tournament as a possible springboar­d to represent this (Pirates) badge in the best possible way.”

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MUSA BILANKULU

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