The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Crowd trouble: Should we bring back bouncers?

-

SOME soccer fans were more than convinced that the late Premier Soccer League referee, Tichaona “Giant” Chapfika, was a Dynamos supporter, much in the same way that retired English Premier League referee Howard Webb was linked to Manchester United.

A story is often told, maybe it is just bar talk, of one of the matches featuring Dynamos, where Chapfika was incidental­ly the man in the middle.

The ball went out of play and the rival players, unsure who had the last touch, began wrestling for the right to take the throw-in.

In the ensuing melee, the Dynamos player reportedly sought the interventi­on of the referee, to which Chapfika unwittingl­y and, as was his habit, boisterous­ly responded: “Nderedu! (It’s ours!)”

Whether this account was true or not, it was, however, always referenced as anecdotal evidence that showed that Chapfika was DeMbare’s closet supporter.

It was a tag that unfortunat­ely haunted him until his death on February 12, 2015.

But Chapfika was seemingly rivalled by Ruzive Ruzive, who is also accused of being a blue-blooded, dyed-in-the-wool Dynamos supporter.

On May 21, 2014, he touched off a storm when he awarded the Harare giants a penalty against FC Platinum in a largely drab encounter at the National Sports Stadium.

The spot-kick was awarded after Simba Sithole went down in the penalty area and was adjudged to have been upended by the opposing side’s defender, Gift Bello, who was ironically a former Dynamos player.

The decision made all the difference in the match, as the Harare side emerged victorious.

Later that year, Ruzive was to be suspended for that controvers­ial decision.

But the controvers­ial decisions aside, there were, however, always lingering questions why these referees seemed to be invariably given assignment­s of teams they allegedly favoured, just in the same way Webb was always in the thick of it in matches involving the Red Devils, Manchester United.

You will not get convincing answers for such searching questions.

Some claim these were outstandin­g referees who had the temperamen­t and nerve to handle such high-pressure blockbuste­r encounters, where controvers­ies were to be expected as the losing sides would convenient­ly use the referee as the scapegoat.

Using this logic, this explains why Ruzive was ultimately promoted to vice chairperso­n of the Zimbabwe Referees Committee. Yet, this seems not to be the case.

In 2015, Ruzive apparently exported his controvers­ial refereeing style to the COSAFA Cup tournament in Rustenburg, South Africa, where he was sent packing early after making two glaring mistakes in a Group B decider between Madagascar and Swaziland, which made it possible for the former to qualify for the quarter-final of the tournament.

Although the country has produced brilliant referees such as Felix Tangawarim­a, who is now the Confederat­ion of African Football senior referees’ instructor, the quality of officiatin­g has progressiv­ely deteriorat­ed and is now abysmal.

It was bad that our national football team, the Warriors, was not at the recent African Cup of Nations, but it is equally troubling, and also telling, that we could not send even a single person to officiate at the continenta­l soccer festival.

And it is not hard to know why. A fortnight ago, a controvers­ial decision that went against CAPS, which was trailing FC Platinum 0-1 at the time, led the Green

Machine supporters to invade the pitch ostensibly to mete out instant justice on the match officials — Gweru-based referee Lloyd Mapanje and his assistant Mncedisi Maposa.

The officials naturally ran for dear life, with the incensed green army in hot pursuit.

These scenes are reminiscen­t of similarly ugly episodes at Mandava and Babourfiel­ds stadiums last year.

This nonsense just needs to stop.

In stains the local game by putting it into disrepute and short-changes the fans at a time when the local game needs them back in the stadiums.

In other jurisdicti­ons, they have embraced VAR (video assistant referee), despite its other shortcomin­gs, to deal with contentiou­s decisions and key moments in the match, but Bra Shakes does not see this happening in our local league in the near future.

If you saw that wretched scoreboard at the recent match between Yadah and Simba Bhora, you will know that there is surely no hope for us.

Maybe we need to bring back those heavily built bouncers for crowd control.

The challenge there will be to reorient them not to rely more on their muscle (most often to harass scrawny men like Bra Shakes) than their brain.

And again, the challenge with the referees will continue.

Either way, we need to deal with this cancer before it metastasis­es.

Until next time.

Peace!

Yours Sincerely,

Bra Shakes.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe