Daily Dispatch

Six or sticks. Full points a must from Bafana’s next two games

Beating São Tomé twice in four days will ease team’s Afcon campaign

- MARC STRYDOM

If death and taxes are certaintie­s, so is the fact that two wins for Bafana Bafana against São Tomé and Principe either side of this weekend will have them close to qualificat­ion to the 2022 Africa Cup of Nations.

Also certain is that anything less than the six points on offer from the games at Moses Mabhida Stadium in Durban on Friday (9pm) and Nelson Mandela Bay Stadium on Monday (3pm) will make life difficult in the campaign.

It could see coach Molefi Ntseki under pressure too, just five matches into his tenure.

It has been hard to assess Ntseki s performanc­e in his

’ now 18 months as head coach.

No Bafana coach could have seen so many planned fixtures called off due to unforeseen circumstan­ces.

In his first month in charge, first Zambia then Madagascar pulled out of friendlies in response to a wave of xenophobia in SA.

Ntseki finally started with a decent friendly win against Mali in October 2019, followed by a mixed start to the Nations Cup qualifiers with a 2-0 away defeat to Ghana and a 1-0 home win against Sudan.

For a second time, Ntseki faced cancelled matches as the back-to-back home and away games against São Tomé were postponed as internatio­nal football ground to a halt due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Nine months later Bafana returned with rusty performanc­es, drawing against Namibia and losing against Zambia in last month s preparatio­n

’ friendlies, as Ntseki experiment­ed with players. Against São Tomé who

— have ceded their home game in the interests of limiting travel in the midst of the pandemic

— Ntseki has a chance to earn two huge wins and be on the verge of qualificat­ion for Cameroon

2022.

He also could potentiall­y see the bottom fall out with anything less.

The coach welcomed new Glasgow Rangers signing Bongani Zungu into his squad as the last arrival on Wednesday. By late yesterday we saw the “arrival of Bongani Zungu after travelling for 22 hours coming from Scotland. And we are happy that the whole squad is here, Ntseki said on Thursday.

We will have our last preparatio­n “this afternoon with all 25 players who were called up to this camp. The preparatio­ns have been going very well. The players are looking forward “to it. There is a lot of interest coming from the players in terms of doing well for the country, doing well for themselves.

We are fully aware of the “challenges that come with it. São Tomé are a very difficult team,” he said.

But all that is important is for “us to get maximum points in the two matches.

We have prepared well mentally, “physically and tactically so we will be able to execute the plan come match day on Friday. And another plan will come out for the match on Monday.”

In Zungu, Percy Tau of Anderlecht and Montpellie­r s

’ Keagan Dolly, Ntseki has some in-form European-based players earning game time.

They add quality to Premier Soccer League-based stars also performing such as striker Bradley Grobler and goalkeeper Ronwen Williams.

The 72nd-ranked Bafana

— quarterfin­alists at the 2019 Nations Cup in Egypt, where they beat the hosts in the second round should be

— expected to breeze past 182ndranke­d São Tomé.

But it has been in mismatches like these that shock results against teams such as Cape Verde and the Seychelles made life difficult for the South Africans in their past two major qualifying campaigns.

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 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES/ANESH DEBIKY ?? OVERSEAS QUALITY: Bafana Bafana’s Percy Tau is one of the in-form players in the squad against São Tomé and Principe on Friday.
Picture: GALLO IMAGES/ANESH DEBIKY OVERSEAS QUALITY: Bafana Bafana’s Percy Tau is one of the in-form players in the squad against São Tomé and Principe on Friday.

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