Cape Argus

SuperSport seek to disarm Mazembe’s ‘secret weapon’, make history

- NJABULO NGIDI

A CONFIDENT Thuso Phala boldly predicts that SuperSport United will exploit TP Mazembe’s strength to win their maiden Caf Confederat­ion Cup.

Matsatsant­sa a Pitori take on the African powerhouse, who have 10 continenta­l titles, on Sunday in the first leg of the final at Stade TP Mazembe in Lubumbashi (3.30pm SA time).

The 18,000 tickets available for the match go on sale today with each fan allocated a single ticket due to the high demand to witness Mazembe move a step closer to retaining their title.

The last time SuperSport visited Mazembe, the fans who filled Stade TP Mazembe weren’t too pleased with their own team. They booed the Ravens off the field, angry that they were held to a 2-2 draw by Matsatsant­sa in the group stage. But they also applauded SuperSport for their gallant fight before letting their players have it.

“We are going to go to Mazembe and turn the crowd against them,” Phala said.

“When you have a big support base and those fans are used to winning, they turn against you quickly when things aren’t going well. We have seen that happen even here at home.

“We have to go there, play good football and turn their fans against them, which would be to our advantage.”

SuperSport flew to the DR Congo this morning with Morgan Gould, who landed with the Bafana Bafana contingenc­y yesterday. Gould is there to give his team support while he and Reneilwe Letsholony­ane serve their suspension­s.

SuperSport booked their place in the final the hard way after drawing the home leg in the quarter-finals and semis, which saw them play for their lives in front of hostile crowds against Zesco United and Club Africain, who were unbeaten in this tournament in their own backyards.

“I think we had a tougher route to the final than Mazembe,” Phala said.

“They will be wary of us even though they will be playing at home. We must use that to our advantage. We want an away goal. We aren’t going to sit back and say, ‘ah we are playing against the mighty Mazembe so we need to be cautious’. We will attack them and look for that goal.”

Coach Eric Tinkler will assess the tournament’s top goalscorer Jeremy Brockie before deciding on whether to start him. The New Zealand forward landed this morning from Peru via Brazil and immediatel­y flew to the DRC with his teammates. But jetlag or tiredness will be the least of his worries as his team have a short at making history.

“I think sometimes we tend to make a meal of ‘hostile environmen­ts’,” Phala said.

“You can go somewhere and your flight is delayed, which the team you’re facing has nothing to do with. But because you have the mind-set that everyone is out to get you, you start panicking thinking that this is part of their plans to unsettle you.

“When we went to Liberia, we couldn’t land and had to fly around for two hours. We went to Tunisia and had an experience of a lifetime with the crowd that we played in front of, which we don’t get here. They didn’t intimidate us but made us stronger. The lasers and everything else were there but we still won 3-1. It’s all in the mind.”

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Thuso Phala
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