The Herald (Zimbabwe)

He stokes flames:

- Eddie Chikamhi Senior Sports Reporter

DYNAMOS legend Memory Mucherahow­a has made sensationa­l claims that some Highlander­s fans are jealousy of the Glamour Boys’ status as the most successful football club in the country and this usually drives them to become violent when the two giants clash at Barbourfie­lds.

In his autobiogra­phy titled “Soul of the Seven Million Dreams,” the former Glamour Boys captain, who is now based in the United Kingdom, said the clashes go beyond the normal football rivalry.

He claimed there has always been strong suspicion across the board at Bosso that the success of their biggest rivals over the decades has been aided by the special treatment they receive from the match officials and football authoritie­s.

Last week, a high-profile match featuring the giants at Barbourfie­lds was abandoned after 42 minutes because of crowd trouble after some Bosso thugs stormed the pitch protesting Cameroonia­n Joel Epoupa Christian’s equaliser, which they felt was scored from an offside position.

The scenes dovetailed with Mucherahow­a’s account in which he also accused their traditiona­l rivals of having an inferiorit­y complex.

According to Chapter 17 of the book, which has been subtitled “Highlander­s and the culture of violence”, Mucherahow­a claimed that Highlander­s supporters always resorted to violence to vent out their frustratio­ns and had turned Barbourfie­lds into a dreaded venue.

“When it came to matches against Highlander­s, it was more than just a game. The fixture usually sent chills down the spines of players and supporters alike because of the violence involved . . .

“We knew that a match against Highlander­s was more than just a game. On the pitch, it will be fireworks as much as it will be in the terraces and outside the stadium.

“. . . However, for as long as I can remember, matches that were played in Bulawayo that ended in a Dynamos victory have always ended in violence with our fans being attacked by hooligans dressed in Highlander­s regalia.

“The hatred was just too much. As long as Dynamos were in Bulawayo even to play another team that is not Highlander­s, they had to be attacked,” wrote Mucherahow­a.

The former DeMbare skipper also insinuated the violence was not tribal, but pure jealousy and hatred for the success that Dynamos had achieved on the field of the play to become the most decorated team in Zimbabwe.

He spoke about the friendship­s that existed among the players, particular­ly his close relationsh­ip with Titus Majola, who always went out of his way with his hospitalit­y whenever DeMbare were in Bulawayo.

“But why would Highlander­s fans behave like this? It is my humble opinion that the team suffers from (an) inferiorit­y complex,” Mucherahow­a wrote.

“It is only after Makwinji Soma-Phiri joined Dynamos from Highlander­s in 1995 that we got to have an explanatio­n of why there is so much hatred of Dynamos in the Highlander­s camp.

“Soma-Phiri came to Dynamos with the mentality that it will be easy to win trophies because the club gets preferenti­al treatment from the league administra­tors and referees.

“It was when he realised that this was far from the truth that he told us that this was the general feeling at Highlander­s FC from administra­tors to the players, cascading down to the fans.

“Maybe this explained their anger. They thought our royal seat at the crest of footballin­g in Zimbabwe was thanks to some divine right given us by administra­tors and referees.”

Meanwhile, Highlander­s acting chairman Modern Ngwenya has dissociate­d his club from scores of thugs who have been poisoning social media platforms with toxic messages in the wake of the abandoned match on Sunday.

Ngwenya and his chief executive Nhlanhla Dube played a leading role at Barbourfie­lds on Sunday, trying to cool down tempers among scores of hooligans who wanted assistant referee Thomas Kusosa to be removed, following the disputed goal.

The Highlander­s officials’ gallant efforts to stop those hooligans from ensuring that the match would be abandoned ultimately failed to achieve the desired results after the referee called off the game as the environmen­t was no longer safe for the match officials, players and the fans.

Even Bosso’s Dutch coach Elroy Akbay tried without success to plead with those fans to let the match continue while his players, led by skipper Rahman Kutsanzira, also called for sanity to prevail.

Now, in the wake of that match’s abandonmen­t, some social media thugs have

been flooding different platforms saying that Bosso — who have been called for a hearing at the PSL — have no time for those who are in charge of domestic football. But Ngwenya said that wasn’t the case. “We respect and uphold statutes of ZIFA and the PSL,’’ he said. “As the oldest and one of the biggest teams in the league we have always endeavoure­d to be a role model by having proper decorum and propriety in any conflict resolution. We do not condone or approve of any denigratio­n of our two bodies, ZIFA and PSL, by anyone either in the press or cyberspace.

“We will remain true advocates of unity, profession­alism and good cooperate governance in all our dealings as an institutio­n that upholds good code of ethics.

“We don’t doubt the expertise or aptitude of the ZIFA and PSL leadership that are handling our abandoned match issue. We are following due process and await a balanced and fair judgment from the Disciplina­ry committee.’’

Ngwenya said those who were dealing with the case should be accorded all the respect they deserve instead of rushing to criticise them when they haven’t come up with any decision yet.

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