Cape Argus

‘I’m worried about game’

Comitis concerned about future of football if season doesn’t restart soon

- MINENHLE MKHIZE minenhle.mkhize@inl.co.za

CAPE Town City chairman John Comitis is anticipati­ng a collapse in football if the local season doesn’t resume soon.

Comitis is worried about the state of South African football because of the delay with the resumption of the Premier Soccer League (PSL) action.

The PSL has been on pause since mid-March.

In an interview with Independen­t Media, Comitis revealed why he felt that the lengthy wait could collapse the industry.

“If we don’t resume, there’s going to be problems. Sponsors are going to start asking questions – like our own sponsors are asking questions.

“I don’t know where we will be without DirectAxis, who have stuck with us regardless. We are hoping that we will return to football, because we are going to suffer (if we don’t),” Comitis elaborated.

The Citizens have already lost revenue that they were generating from SportPesa, as the betting company hasn’t been able to compensate City during the national lockdown.

“The disaster that looms means that people are going to lose their jobs and the industry will collapse,” he added.

The PSL were prepared to reboot the local season this past weekend, but Safa deemed that the match officials were not fit to officiate the games.

According to the scientific research that was conducted by the Referee’s Technical Committee, match officials will be ready in two weeks – hence Safa suggested the first week of August as an appropriat­e date to return to action.

“We’ve been training via zoom and until we were given permission to get back to training. We’ve been training for the past three months. The players are getting frustrated. The entire industry is getting frustrated. It is not nice. The coaches are getting fired. We are aimlessly training for nothing,” Comitis added.

It remains to be seen as to when the local season will resume, if it does. The league might be forced to call it off if the delay continues.

But cancelling the rest of the season will have huge consequenc­es. Crowning the champions can be easy, but deciding on relegation and promotion can prove difficult.

“We are hopeful that sanity will prevail and (we will) return to business, like other businesses that have been allowed to return. We are just waiting to see what will develop. We will find out what is going on maybe Monday or Tuesday,” Comitis said.

If the local season does resume, the league will be finished behind closed doors in a bio-bubble in Gauteng.

“We’ve been told to get ready. We need to wait for PSL and Safa to finalise what is going to happen,” Comitis stated.

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