Sunday Times

Beware of the quiet Hunt revolution

- ✼Twitter: @bbkunplugg­ed99

The world of football is caught up in a whirlwind of Hurricane Erling Halaand, the Norwegian who is wreaking havoc on fields in England and the rest of Europe. We are all in awe.

However, I’m talking about that man who, a few years ago, pitched a tent at Mount Naturena and whose arrival sparked hopes that happy days were on the horizon. When crossed the t’s and dotted the i’s on a threeyear contract, Kaizer Chiefs fans were enveloped in delirium. It was like the biblical Moses had arrived to liberate them from slavery and take them to the promised land of milk and honey.

When a call came from the Eastern Cape, it was pregnant with promise of a chance of righting the wrongs at Naturena. But the move from Chiefs to Chippa United proved an act akin to jumping from the pan straight into the fire.

A few days later trigger-happy Chippa boss Chippa Mpengesi stated in a long statement that his Hunt was for keeps. He was categorica­lly clear that he will desist from infamous ways of dismissing coaches at the drop of a hat.

It was no surprise when a few months after their marriage he served Hunt with divorce papers. Once more the four-time Premier Soccer League winning coach found himself as a statistic of the country’s forever mounting unemployme­nt numbers.

Look at Gavin Hunt today. Unlike Haaland whose name is on everyone’s lips and has captured the world’s attention, Hunt has quietly been working on a chance of reminding us of his capabiliti­es.

After the rocky affairs in the south of Joburg and Gqeberha, he went back to rekindle his love affair with SuperSport United, the club where he establishe­d himself as a championsh­ip-winning coach with three successive PSL titles. His fourth came at the now defunct Bidvest Wits.

The SuperSport he returned to had been stripped to the bone of the core of their stars

— Grant Kekana, Aubrey Modiba, Teboho Mokoena, Ronwen Williams and Sipho

Mbule — to cross-town rivals Mamelodi Sundowns. Of course they went there out of their own free will and Stan Matthews is happy to collect the millions that come with the transactio­ns.

Hunt has whipped what he found into shape. They started slowly. But look at the log table today. They occupy third spot, having registered three victories on the trot. That has helped them take their tally of points to 17, the same number as Richards Bay, who were due to meet Orlando Pirates in a late kick-off last night

No, this columnist is not claiming that Hunt will win the league. What I am saying is that he has covered good ground with a rash of hungry players working in tandem with some old warhorses guiding the greenhorns.

Captain Onismor Bhasera was one of the league winners with Hunt at Wits and has bucket loads of experience. Everyone who knows their shoulder from their elbow will know that the apple did not fall too far from the tree with one of their sharpshoot­ers, Les Grobler’s son Bradley.

He knows his way to goal and despite suffering a number of injuries, when he is on the field you discount him at your own

A few days later trigger-happy Chippa boss Chippa Mpengesi stated in a long statement that his Hunt was for keeps

peril. And, oh, there is that life of the dressing room, the energetic Thamsanqa Gabuza, the striker who is happiness personifie­d. This duo were on target when they helped their team to a 3-1 victory on Friday night, which saw them climb up to their current position.

Hunt has this thing of saying he can collect 12 points from a possible 15 in five matches, the total of that from 30 matches adds up to a healthy tally.

He will be quietly hoping to be in that zone and with his trusted lieutenant­s, Grant Johnson and Andre Arendse, these are three wily old heads to have all worked their way up the championsh­ip road.

Beware of the quiet Hunt revolution. This his chance at redemption, a chance to prove that he is not yesterday’s man.

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