Sowetan

Era of ‘short cuts’ over as Chiefs rebuild

Sporting director on mission to raise giants’ standards

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Chiefs’ decline has been markedly evident in the last few seasons but in this exclusive interview, Kaizer Motaung jnr tells Nkareng Matshe how they can get back on track

The announceme­nt that Kaizer Motaung jnr would take over as Kaizer Chiefs sporting director in July elicited predictabl­e excitement from the club’s supporters.

Suddenly, they saw in him a breath of fresh air, someone young enough and familiar with modern direction the club needs to become a dominant force once again.

At the base of Amakhosi faithful’s frustratio­n has been the now six-year trophy drought, which Motaung is all too aware of as he settles into his new role.

But as an air of optimism surrounds Naturena amid the lifting of the stunting transfer-ban which saw them fail to reinforce a hugely limited squad last season, Motaung has warned the process to return to the glory will be painstakin­g and arduous.

“It cannot be overnight,” he cautioned, as he maintained his dream is to see the club regain the identity which made them a household name they are today in SA football.

“It would be presumptuo­us to comment on what has been happening the past six years, without proper informatio­n.

“But what is clear is that something has not been working. I can categorica­lly say that the standard we’ve set has declined, and our mission should be to get it back up where it’s supposed to be.”

Key to a return to winning ways, according to Motaung, will be what he terms “alignment” of all stakeholde­rs.

“There has been a misalignme­nt, for sure,” he said. “We should heed lessons of the past six seasons and seek to restore our core values and principles across the board; from management to players to supporters.

“The results haven’t been there and it’s clear you can’t take short cuts on performanc­e. This trophy drought has showed us that we need to have a foundation, a playing system, a philosophy, an identity, which ingredient­s we used to have.

“We have to get back to the basics and lay the building blocks – not cut corners.”

It is true that during this trophy lull, Chiefs did come close on no fewer than five occasions: they lost two cup finals in 2015, another in 2019, and infamously, surrendere­d the league leadership to Mamelodi Sundowns in the final half an hour of the 2020/21 season.

But it was this year’s run in the CAF Champions League, which ended in a 0-3 defeat to Al-Ahly, that Motaung feels whereas it showed a lot of promise, was ultimately undone by their frailties.

“It was a proper learning curve. We can be proud that we had five of our academy products in the team which secured our historic spot in the group phases.

“The highest honour of any club is to win the Fifa Club

World Cup. That means we have to dominate locally, and then on the continent.

“It’s the vision of the chairman (Kaizer Motaung snr). We saw this when we were named African club of the year in 2002 (after winning the Mandela Cup and two domestic trophies).”

 ?? / ANTONIO MUCHAVE ?? Jabu Pule and Brian Baloyi celebrate lifting the Mandela Cup with Chiefs in December 2001 against Inter de Luanda at Ellis Park.
/ ANTONIO MUCHAVE Jabu Pule and Brian Baloyi celebrate lifting the Mandela Cup with Chiefs in December 2001 against Inter de Luanda at Ellis Park.

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