Sowetan

Bafana would probably have fared worse than Qatar

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Bafana Bafana’s undesirabl­e record of being the first World Cup hosts to exit the tournament at the first hurdle may have been matched by Qatar this week, when the Asian nation bowed out with three defeats, zero points and a single goal.

But watching the tournament for the past two weeks, you couldn’t help but wonder if Bafana would have fared any better than Qatar.

Despite taking place in mid-season, when national teams have hardly had friendlies, the standard of football in display in Qatar has been of high quality, with only a few teams living up to the minnows tag, and others rising unexpected­ly.

It left me thinking: what if by some miracle, Bafana were there? Suppose we had eliminated Ghana in qualifying, would our lads have been able to hold on the same way the Black Stars did in beating South Korea 3-2 this week, to go into today’s final match against Uruguay in with a chance of qualifying for the next round?

There’s no question that in 2010, Bafana fared far better than Qatar did now, as we were eliminated only due to goal difference after finishing on four points behind Uruguay and Mexico.

But we have regressed so much that even poor Qatar – if we were to meet them in an internatio­nal – would probably humiliate us despite their wretched record that surely will make them the worst placed side at this tournament. In the 2010 event, we were rated 20th out of the 32 participan­ts. Now we can’t qualify for a 24-team Africa Cup of Nations.

That is why despite our unwanted record having new owners, we shouldn’t dare celebrate. This World Cup is further evidence of how far behind SA has fallen behind world football standards. Unfancied teams like Ecuador and Saudi Arabia have drawn plaudits for their applicatio­n and general play.

But it is African teams that Bafana must compare themselves against. Our five representa­tives – Senegal, Morocco, Tunisia, Cameroon and Ghana – all entered the final pool games with something to play for. Senegal and Morocco went on to seal the deal and go through to the last 16.

A common trait among the quintet is the fact that almost all of their squad members ply their trade in Europe, whereas we expect Bafana to make do with mostly a PSLbased team. It simply won’t work.

It was encouragin­g to read this week Safa president Danny Jordaan acknowledg­ing SA may have to go on a naturalisa­tion drive to boost Bafana’s resources. This is long overdue, but can the process of identifyin­g European players with SA roots bring us better talent than Ricardo Nunes and David Somma?

Also, this process has to include players we already know, such as Kobamelo Kodisang and Lebo Phiri who are in Europe already. That Hugo Broos continues to ignore them while he picks underperfo­rming local nobodies is scandalous.

The high standard at this World Cup tells us Bafana have no choice but to adapt, or remain dead. Qatar’s below-par performanc­e on the field should not fool us into believing we could have done better. After all, they are ranked 50th in the world right now, while we were in the 80s when we hosted.

The gulf in class between us and world football has grown so much that we probably wouldn’t even have had a shot at goal at World Cup!

 ?? /JOHN SIBLEY/REUTERS ?? Mohammed Muntari and Boualem Khoukhi can’t hide their dejection after a loss, condemning Qatar to an early exit.
/JOHN SIBLEY/REUTERS Mohammed Muntari and Boualem Khoukhi can’t hide their dejection after a loss, condemning Qatar to an early exit.
 ?? Nkareng Matshe ??
Nkareng Matshe

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