The Herald (Zimbabwe)

PSL bosses turn party spoilers

- Sports Reporter Sports Reporter

ZIFA vice-president Omega Sibanda felt like an unwanted guest as FC Platinum were crowned champions at Ascot on Saturday.

On a day the Premier Soccer League connived to frustrate the media, with the league’s communicat­ions officer Kudzai Bare acting like a woman plucked from hell, Sibanda left before the trophy presentati­on ceremony.

“I am leaving, no one has bothered to invite me to the trophy presentati­on ceremony and I cannot force my way into a party that I am not invited to,” Sibanda told The Herald as he left Ascot.

“I came here representi­ng ZIFA because we felt our presence at such a grand occasion was needed. We have to been seen to be supporting our biggest affiliate.

“However, the way things were handled today leaves a lot to be desired. One is forced to think twice about going to a PSL game when they get such treatment.

“I had trouble gaining entry into the stadium despite having called the PSL chief executive Kenny Ndebele informing him that I would be making the trip from Bulawayo to Gweru for this game. Ndebele assured me everything will be smooth but it was far from it.”

As Sibanda left, members of the media, who had earlier been denied entry into what was supposedly a VIP area and had to cover the match seated among the fans, struggled to get postmatch OUTGOING Castle Lager Premiershi­p champions CAPS United have congratula­ted their successors to the throne, FC Platinum, for winning their maiden league title.

FC Platinum were crowned 2017 league champions after they finished the season on top of the table with 72 points, two better than closest rivals Dynamos.

The Green Machine, who won the title last season and went on to reach the mini-league of the CAF Champions League, also wished the platinum miners well in Africa.

Makepekepe, who finished fifth following a spirited comeback in the latter stages of the campaign, posted a congratula­tory message on their website yesterday.

“The Presidium, the Board, Man- interviews.

Bare instructed the marshals not to allow the print journalist­s onto the pitch.

“I have been instructed not to allow you guys onto the pitch and there will be no negotiatio­ns,” said the PSL media officer. A member of the Sports Journalist­s Associatio­n Sikhumbuzo Moyo and The Sunday Mail’s sports editor Makomborer­o Mutimukulu led the fight for the media.

“This is unacceptab­le and one gets the feeling that Bare is not acting alone, she has the backing of a higher office,” said Moyo.

Mutimukulu said it was about time the media united and deal with such “cabals who believe the media is always looking for free beer and food rather than the story.”

“Such fiendish acts from an organisati­on that should be media friendly cannot go unchalleng­ed. The media must be allowed to do its job in a conducive environmen­t,” said Mutimukulu.

“There is nothing special about that makeshift VIP area, these journalist­s were not after the beer and the food, which we can buy for ourselves anywhere, but were after the story, the championsh­ip story.

“On Tuesday, when we meet to select the Soccer Stars of the Year, we will tell the PSL what we couldn’t tell them at a public venue like Ascot. They will certainly hear from us, both in words and in action.”

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