Diamond Fields Advertiser

SA’S TEAMS SHOULD HAVE NO PROBLEMS

- MATSHELANE MAMABOLO

ON THE FACE of it, South Africa’s three representa­tives in continenta­l competitio­ns should have little to no problem progressin­g to the next stage of the competitio­n.

The opposition that both Mamelodi Sundowns and Orlando Pirates face in the Caf Champions League, as well as Kaizer Chiefs’ adversarie­s in the Caf Confederat­ion Cup, are not the kind that should see our teams tumbling out.

Granted, strange things have happened in this beautiful game. But the trio will have no one but themselves to blame should they not progress to the next round.

And it is not because one undermines the opposition, but simply based on continenta­l football pedigree – the local sides should still be around when the draw is made for the next stage of the two competitio­ns.

For starters, while the South Africans are previous winners of the competitio­ns they are involved in – their adversarie­s are essentiall­y new to the first round proper.

Except for Sundowns’ opposition Al Ahly Benghazi of Libya, the other two sides are in new territory in the first round proper.

Both Soweto giants Pirates and Chiefs are hosting in this weekend’s first leg – an advantage on its own – and should make good use of home comforts to essentiall­y render the second leg away trips a mere formality by winning comfortabl­y.

The Buccaneers welcome Namibian outfit African Stars to Orlando Stadium tomorrow evening (6pm kick-off).

Stars are in their debut season in the Champions League. They have, however, previously played in the Caf Confederat­ion Cup (in 2014) as well as in the second tier competitio­n’s predecesso­r – the Caf Cup back in 1992.

They were knocked out at the first hurdle on both occasions.

As Namibian champions this year – Stars went up against Volcan of the Comoros in the preliminar­y round and prevailed 2-1 on aggregate, the result achieved via a home victory with the away leg ending goalless.

Go all the way

Not the kind of results to send Micho Sredojevic and his men shaking in their boots then. After all, the Buccaneers had it fairly easy getting over the initial hurdle – they beat Seychelles’ Lightstars 8-2 on aggregate – and this next one also appears likely to provide no problems for the team looking to go all the way.

Chiefs are at Durban’s Moses Mabhida Stadium a little later (8pm) against Madagascar’s AASSM Elgeco Plus and will be confident after they won their first match (1-0 over Supersport United in the Absa Premiershi­p) under Ernst Middendorp on Wednesday.

Elgeco have never made it this far before and actually sneaked in courtesy of a slim aggregate win after victory at home, but defeat away to Deportivo Unidada of Equatorial Guinea.

If Chiefs play with the energy they did against Supersport, they should have no problem rendering this tie a no-contest by the end of tomorrow night’s first leg.

Sundowns are actually the ones who will probably have to dig a little deeper to progress.

For one, Pitso Mosimane will be without a few key players in Ricardo Nascimento, Themba Zwane and Rivaldo Coetzee – the latter two having been crucial in their progress to this stage.

And then there’s the fact that Al Ahly Benghazi are no pushovers, having shown back in 2014 when they eliminated their Egyptian namesakes Al Ahly to make their only appearance in the group phase.

The match will be played in neutral Cairo given the unrest out in Libya.

Sundowns though are seasoned campaigner­s who have had some great successes in north Africa and should prove too strong for the Libyan side that limped into this phase via a narrow 3-2 aggregate victory over Mauritania’s Nouadhibou.

If the South African top league is as great as we often make it out to be, then these three club have the responsibi­lity to prove it by not only overcoming what appears easy opposition, but by going all the way.

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