The Star Late Edition

Chiefs’ tactics work like a bomb

- RODNEY REINERS

Unbeaten Cape Town City were riding the crest; Kaizer Chiefs were looking a little unsteady.

So Amakhosi needed to have a solid tactical plan when they came to Cape Town Stadium for their PSL clash against Benni McCarthy’s side on Wednesday.

And this is how Chiefs coach Steve Komphela explained the secret behind his team’s 2-0 victory.

“There are two ways in football; you can give the initiative or you can take it,” explained Komphela.

“If you take the initiative, you are too expansive, and you need to handle a lot. We needed to be smart (against City). And, importantl­y, we didn’t park the bus, we still came out nicely and played. Perhaps people expected us to be more dictating, so we gave them (City) the initiative for obvious reasons.

“We had the better discipline defensivel­y. Yes, they got behind us at times, but we dealt with it. The defenders did well and there was also great protection from the midfield.

“And when we came out on the counter, we did so fluently and fast.

“But take nothing away from City, they push you to the limit.”

The Soweto club’s conservati­ve game plan worked and, despite being under the cosh for large periods of the match, they emerged victors. They absorbed the pressure from the Capetonian­s, and then hit them brutally and effectivel­y on the counter. It was Amakhosi’s first win of the season – and it was founded on the clever premise of nullifying City’s strengths.

McCarthy says, in all the time he’s known Chiefs, he’s never seen them sit back as much as they did on Wednesday night. The response from Komphela was simple and unequivoca­l: “It was deliberate.”

“Credit to Chiefs, they frustrated us. Their game plan was spot-on, in that they allowed us to play and then used their wingers to get behind us.

“(Goalkeeper Itumeleng) Khune was the massive difference between the teams. When you have such a keeper, it makes life so much easier,” said McCarthy.

“It was like a funeral in our dressing-room afterwards. But I still think my team can be proud of their performanc­e. It was an entertaini­ng game of football, end-to-end stuff. So it’s a loss, and all good things come to an end. Losing to Chiefs doesn’t make us a bad team. It’s still early, though, and the defeat is not the end of the world. Now we just have to see how (we) move on from this. I was gutted that the winning streak came to an end. The challenge now is to get the players to pick themselves up and keep going with a positive attitude.”

For both City and Chiefs, the challenges keep coming thick and fast. Komphela’s men are back in action again tomorrow when they host defending league champions Wits, while McCarthy is preparing his City team for a clash against his former club Orlando Pirates, in Soweto on Tuesday night.

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