Cape Argus

‘Chiefs fans want a show, not a bad movie’

- Mazola Molefe

PITSO MOSIMANE issued an apology to Mamelodi Sundowns supporters yesterday, but it wasn’t for a misdemeano­ur. The Downs coach believes it is time to play ugly and celebrate positive results rather than entertain but go home empty-handed.

Steve Komphela, his Kaizer Chiefs counterpar­t and the man he comes up against for the second time this season when the two giants meet tomorrow night at FNB Stadium in a grudge PSL clash, couldn’t quite agree with his counterpar­t’s remarks.

But that is a familiar tone when Downs and Chiefs play – the two coaches, bosom buddies during their playing days, are hardly ever on the same page. Mosimane

is playing catch-up with Amakhosi in fourth place and having played four more matches than their title rivals, who are one position below and have two points fewer. But the Downs coach doesn’t care whether their championsh­ip defence is easy on the eye or not.

“I think we can say it is time for smash and grabs,” said Mosimane. He was making a valid point considerin­g the games are coming thick and fast and Downs have also made it into the group stages of the CAF Champions League, a trophy they are also hoping to retain later this year after clinching it in October. “This is also the time to ask for forgivenes­s from our fans because (positive) results are more important than expansive football,” said Mosimane.

“We have to box clever now, like knowing when to take off our key players when we feel we have killed off the game,and we are going to need these guys in the next match. Maybe that won’t be possible against Chiefs because they are (good) opposition and the calibre of this game might not allow that. But we have to hope.”

Komphela shook his head and argued that his group of supporters would not easily accept such a declaratio­n.

“My thinking is different,” he explained. “We don’t just want the results, but the type of football that makes the fans happy. When you have a certain way of playing, you have to somehow maintain that and still get important wins. Football is therapy, but we know the stakes are much higher as we are judged on results as coaches. You know what happens when you don’t win games. We want our fans to come for a show, not a bad movie.”

Perhaps Mosimane could afford to lower expectatio­ns with regard to how Sundowns will be playing their next few matches in all competitio­ns, especially in the Premier League, because he has twice won the championsh­ip since joining Downs in December 2012. Komphela is in his second season and is still without a trophy – so the jury is still out on his credential­s as a Chiefs coach. One thing the two men did agree on was that tomorrow night’s fixture is a potential title decider.

“Chiefs have been better than us (in) their past eight league games,” Mosimane said. “We are not in a very good space and we have a lot of injuries. But we can’t complain. We have a huge game coming up.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa