Saturday Star

Sporting gods can provide five-course feast

- MARK KEOHANE

AS someone who just loves playing sport, watching sport and writing about sport as a career, here’s my five-strong wish list for 2022. There is no order of preference as if any one of these five things happen, it will make for one heck of a sporting year.

And if all five happen… Well, then I will forever be indebted to the sporting gods.

If you have followed my writing for the last year or 30 years, you will know that cricket is my first love, rugby is the main sport I write about, soccer is another I follow intensely, but there isn’t a sport I don’t enjoy and over the years I have come to understand North American sports more and appreciate the magnificen­t athletes that determine the popularity of each of these codes.

I am privileged to write about sport and to tell the story of those sporting people we idolize, condemn, love and loathe but ultimately respect.

I was first published as a 15-yearold in my local community newspaper writing about sport, and it has been one incredible journey over the last 38 years in getting to travel to 40-plus countries and report from some of the most iconic sporting stadia and arenas.

When it comes to soccer, there is Lionel Messi and then there are the rest, so it is only appropriat­e that I start my wish list with the magical Messi.

It would be the ultimate double for me as a Messi disciple for the magician to win the Champions League with Paris St-germain and then go to Qatar and win the World Cup with Argentina. It is more probable that Messi could achieve champion status with PSG than with his country, given Argentina’s internatio­nal record at World Cups since Messi turned profession­al. Argentina haven’t won a World Cup with Messi, but the fact that they have come so close is because of Messi, who earlier this year was named the planet’s best footballer for a record seventh time. Messi has had an indifferen­t start to his PSG career, which I believe will be short-lived, both the indifferen­ce and his time at PSG. He has been fantastic in the Champions League and a spectator in what foreigners call the farmers league, which is the French top league. He was brilliant for Argentina in ensuring they won the Copa America for the first time in 28 years.

This surely has to be the season where the Springbok coach Jacques

Nienaber and the National Director of Rugby Rassie Erasmus give Fassi the opportunit­y to translate his domestic potency onto the internatio­nal stage. Fassi in 2021 played two Test matches for the Springboks. He started on the wing in both and scored two sensationa­l tries. He has so much quality and it was one of the biggest surprises and – for me – disappoint­ments – that Fassi did not play in the Rugby Championsh­ip against Australia or New Zealand and did not get a place in the Test 23 in any of the three end of year Test matches. Fassi has something very special about him and 2022 is the year that the Bok coaching leadership must unleash his talent on the world.

I love the Gypsy King and he has been brilliant for heavyweigh­t boxing. His trilogy against Deontay Wilder was WILD, WICKED and BRUTAL. The third fight had it all and the manner in which Fury destroyed Wilder was emphatic. He is the best heavyweigh­t champion of his time and among the best to ever wear the most prized belts in boxing. Anthony Joshua has been more pretender than contender, but the romantic in me wants the fight to happen where Fury shows up every one of Joshua’s inadequaci­es as a boxer. My wish is for the fight to happen before the end of 2022 and for Fury to knock him out, as he did with Wilder.

Few cricketers in this country get it as tough as Temba Bavuma and his haters always default to the fact that he still has scored just the one Test century, which is one more than they all have. Bavuma, in the first two Tests against India, was South Africa’s best batsman and he showed such composure and presence at Centurion and at the Wanderers. I have followed Bavuma’s career since he was a schoolboy, having worked alongside his father Vuyo Bavuma in our early days at the Cape Argus in Cape Town. If my wish on (Tyson) Fury can only come to fruition at the end of the year, then Temba getting a hundred could happen in Cape Town as early as this month. He scored a beauty of a century against England at Newlands and at what is very much his spiritual cricketing home, it would be joyous for him to add another hundred to his Test resume.

If you love tennis, as I do, then you have to be awed by Roger Feder, Rafa Nadal and Novak Djokovic and what each of these on-court geniuses have achieved in winning 20 Grand Slam men’s single’s titles each. For a decade it was Roger v Rafa and then it became Roger v Novak and Novak v Rafa. All three are brilliant, but with the Fed Express now 40 years-old and injured and Djokovic not guaranteed playing in the Australian Open because of his refusal to get vaccinated, I’d so want to see the street fighter and clay-court master Rafa Nadal conquer all-comers in Melbourne. Nadal’s knees threatened to give way a decade ago, but he keeps on going, with such passion, so precision and such humility. This is another of my sporting wishes that could come to fruition within the first week of February.

been in the top four now.

One question which emanated from the loss to Watford is whether the current Spurs players have it in them to constantly execute Conte’s structure and tactics?

Conte’s current project is a bit different to the ones he had at previous clubs Chelsea and Inter Milan in that the players that he currently has are not as gifted as a whole as the ones he worked with at Chelsea and Inter.

At Inter he relied upon Achraf Hakimi to deliver the goods in defence while Romelu Lukaku never failed to supply the goods up front by bringing goals on the transition. He does not really have the same luxury at Spurs.

Ben Davies and Emerson Royal were quite easily dealt with against Watford. While losing against relegation candidate sides is normal every now and then for perhaps most teams, the manner in which Spurs went down to the Hornets would concern Conte.

Watford were quite happy to sit back, remain calm and make Spurs work. They were quite evidently aware that the more fancied side was just not ticking on the day and unlikely to create many good opportunit­ies given the nature of their play.

Spurs created their fair share of chances in the game but none were really memorable or noteworthy.

While Conte is delivering the results to the best that he can, Spurs need to back him in the transfer window this month if they are really serious about a top four finish. A midfielder or two to help out with the transition in a similar way to how Christian Eriksen did in his day would help.

A failure to back Conte sufficient­ly could also lead to many ardent supporters of the club losing complete faith in it.

 ?? | LEE SMITH Reuters ?? HEAVYWEIGH­T king, Gypsy King Tyson Fury.
| LEE SMITH Reuters HEAVYWEIGH­T king, Gypsy King Tyson Fury.

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