Cape Argus

Was De Sa to blame for Urban Warriors’ faults?

- Rodney Reiners COMMENT

FOOTBALL is about results, nothing else. When the 90 minutes are over, the hard-luck stories and missed opportunit­ies count for nothing. The scoreboard is all that matters, as Ajax Cape Town coach Roger de Sa found to his detriment yesterday.

I will readily admit that I was sad to see De Sa quit as Ajax coach. I always believed he was the right fit for the Cape club’s philosophy of “no youth, no future”. He is a coach who has no hesitation in exposing a talented youngster when he shows the necessary maturity and bottle for big-time football.

Rivaldo Coetzee was just 17 when De Sa threw him in at the deep end of PSL football two years ago – today, the central defender is the country’s most exciting young talent.

With so many other burgeoning Ajax teenagers waiting in the wings, De Sa would probably have loved to stick around, to watch the kids develop and grow. But, hey, when a team doesn’t win for seven games, somebody has to carry the can. And, in football, it’s the coach.

But it again highlights the extremely fragile nature of being a football coach, which is why a liberal dash of humility is always a useful asset in the job. One day, you’re the belle of the ball; the next, you’re one of Cinderella’s ugly step-sisters.

After arriving at Ajax in 2014 De Sa steered the Urban Warriors to two cup finals – the Nedbank Cup and the MTN8. They lost in the former, but won the latter by defeating Kaizer Chiefs 2-1 last season.

It all looked so promising and then this season, despite De Sa strengthen­ing the squad with some high-profile, seasoned PSL campaigner­s, the results just haven’t gone his – or his team’s – way.

But, while De Sa temporaril­y heads for the unemployme­nt queue, the problems that bedevil Ajax remain. And whoever steps into the hot seat will have to find a way to deal with their inability to win.

Are the Cape club’s problems, in fact, a coaching issue? Yes or no? Like with so much of sport, the answer is probably somewhere in the middle. So let’s try to unpack some areas of concern. For one thing, and this is the most glaring, Ajax just cannot seem to convert the numerous opportunit­ies they create into goals. It has been the same old story all season – they have the possession, they make their way into the opposition penalty area, but lack the composure and decisivene­ss to hit the back of the net.

Is that a coaching matter? Probably, but ask any other PSL or national coach about what ails the local game and they will tell you that it’s the lack of goals and reliable goal-scorers.

The second worry revolves around how the Ajax defence are constantly losing concentrat­ion, leading to the conceding of soft goals. Often, the Urban Warriors are playing well, they are dominating the opposition, but then there’s a sudden, inexplicab­le lack of focus at the back; an error, a goal is scored, and Ajax are on the back foot. This has probably been their main source of frustratio­n.

Is it a coaching issue? Not really. The coach can preach about it as much as he wants to, but when the team takes the field, it’s the individual who has to deal with it in his own head. In short, the players need to ensure that they stay in the moment during game situations – it’s about the players’ own personal mental fortitude, applicatio­n and commitment to the team and their success.

The third bone of contention is about the Ajax style, and here, certainly, fingers can be pointed at De Sa. The young Cape side are always at their best when they play the quick-passing possession game that has enthralled local supporters over the years. In recent months, under De Sa, this has been missing, with Ajax giving the ball away far too easily.

These are but a few of the hurdles that have plagued Ajax this season. The new coach will have to deal with these, and many more. But often a football team responds positively to a new coach. The arrival of a new face, a new voice, a new training regime and a new routine galvanises the players, causing them to raise their game to impress the new man. Perhaps, this is what is needed. Let’s hope so – because Cape Town needs a successful Ajax.

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