Cape Argus

DR Congo coach admits chasing a ‘beautiful dream’

-

DEMOCRATIC Republic of Congo are widely regarded as the most dangerous of the lowest seeds going into the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations.

The reasons include a proud record in the competitio­n that includes two titles, several outstandin­g footballer­s, and a coach set to make a record seventh appearance at the competitio­n.

Most pundits are backing Ghana to win Port Elizabeth-based Group B with 2012 bronze medalists Mali and DR Congo contesting the other ticket to the knock-out stage and Niger the whipping boys.

DR Congo are back at the Cup of Nations after a seven-year break with French coach Claude le Roy also in charge when they reached the 2006 quarter-finals before bowing out to hosts Egypt.

Nomadic Le Roy, a bespectacl­ed 64-year-old with flowing blond locks known as the ‘White Wizard’, took Ghana to third place two years later and also spent time in Oman before receiving a telephone call from Kinshasa.

Congolese President Joseph Kabila was on the line and he persuaded the coach to come back to central Africa and take over the struggling Leopards, who have failed to qualify for the past three Cup of Nations.

“The team was in very bad shape,” recalled Le Roy in a Congolese radio interview. “They were ranked 35 in Africa and many stars were no longer interested in playing for the national team.

“An unstable political situation meant football had taken a back seat for a few years, so the priority was to restore confidence to the team and help it operate more profession­ally.

“DR Congo has too much potential to accept not being among the best teams on the continent,” said the coach who guided Cameroon to victory over Nigeria in the 1988 Africa Cup decider.

They had little difficulty reaching the 2013 Cup of Nations, outplaying the Seychelles (7-0) and Equatorial Guinea (5-2) after two-leg ties in a shortened eliminatio­n process.

Dieumerci Mbokani from Belgian champions Anderlecht contribute­d three of the 12 goals

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa