Cape Times

Bafana must forget the ‘C’ game

- Mazola Molefe

PRAIA, CAPE VERDE: At 5am local time yesterday, Bafana Bafana coach Stuart Baxter couldn’t sleep.

If you know the Scotsman and you waged a bet on what had him tossing and turning at the crack of dawn, then you are probably on the money in concluding he was overloaded with informatio­n ahead of yet another crucial clash in his tenure so far.

Bafana face Group D whipping boys Cape Verde at the Estadio Nacional de Cabo Verde, also known as the “Blue Shark Arena” today (8.30pm SA time) in a 2018 World Cup qualifier and for the coach this encounter is not simply the routine victory it’s been advertised to be.

“We shouldn’t think we can come here, bring our C game and think we are going to walk away with three World Cup points. That won’t happen,” Baxter said. “They are good enough to beat people here. I have watched all their games. Burkina Faso (current group leaders with a superior goal difference to Bafana) came here and, I won’t say got free gifts, but got a header from a corner in the third minute and then in a transition where the centre-back passed the ball straight to their centre forward. Apart from that it was a pretty even game, with Cape Verde having a couple of big chances.”

Perhaps also occupying Baxter’s mind was whether he’d play striker Tokelo Rantie, who only arrived on Wednesday night from Turkey and missed one of the two training sessions at the match venue.

“I had a long talk with him Kyrgios: I’m not dedicated to the game at all - see page 10. and what I wanted to establish was whether the mistake was on his side, a question of his attitude and obviously all the things that come together with that,” the coach explained.

“After talking to him and seeing his boarding passes and all of that, it looks like the airline made a huge mistake. He was at the gate at 4am, got checked in and then they told him he is actually booked on a flight for the next day, even though he had a boarding pass to be on that flight. The next day he got a different airline and had to go to Lisbon (Portugal) and when he tried to get his bags out he couldn’t because he didn’t have a visa for Lisbon.”

Having now gathered the facts regarding his key striker’s late arrival, Baxter said starting him was a no-brainer, especially on the back of his superb performanc­e away to Nigeria two months ago, when Bafana won with Rantie scoring the opener in a 2-0 victory.

“It was important for me to establish that it wasn’t his fault and I said to him there was a bit of a cloud before I brought him back (the player failed to show up for the opening World Cup qualifier away in Burkina Faso in October last year). I certainly didn’t want to see that cloud getting dark again,” the coach said.

“That is the good news. The bad news is that he arrived with some flu symptoms. But he says he is 100 percent ready to play. He is a threat and one we want on the field if we can get him on the pitch, of course. He is important because he works in behind their back four and doesn’t allow the opponent to squeeze and compress the game against us.

“To be fair, Percy (Tau) may do that job, Bradley (Grobler) is more of a link player, and therefore if we can get Tokelo on the field, we want him on the field.

“If it had been me and I had been screwed around like he has, I would have been angry.”

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 ??  ?? STUART BAXTER: Awake at 5am
STUART BAXTER: Awake at 5am

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