Sunday Tribune

Sundowns press ahead in march for CAF glory

- MATSHELANE MAMABOLO

SUCH is the height of expectatio­ns placed on Mamelodi Sundowns that even after they succeeded in reaching the semi-final of the CAF Champions League for the second year running, questions about their performanc­e still abounded.

The Brazilians beat Tanzania’s Young Africans 3-2 via penalties at Loftus Versfeld Stadium following a goalless stalemate over two legs. That failure to find the Yanga net was a blot on an otherwise spotless white cloth that everyone seemed to focus on.

After all, a team as experience­d in Champions League football as Sundowns should have made quick work of the quarter-final debutants – right?

Football is fickle at the top, though, and historical performanc­es and pedigree often count for nothing at the business end of the continent’s premier club knockout competitio­n. And having failed to impose their celebrated style of play, marked by patient build-ups from the back and confident slick passing, both in Dar es Salaam and Pretoria, the African Football league (AFL) champions had to rely on Ronwen Williams’ brilliance at stopping spot kicks to progress.

Shoot-outs are a part of the game, and as unimpressi­ve as Sundowns’ march to the penultimat­e stage of the tournament was, the fact is they are in the semi-final again. Coach Rulani Mokwena was at pains to make bloodthirs­ty newshounds aware of this at the post-match media conference.

“Of course we need to improve everywhere,” he agreed. “But today I;m not getting technical. I just want to enjoy the moment of being in the semi-final. Sundowns are in the CAF Champions League semi-final, guys – and that’s all that matters.”

In a way, he was right. For as much as their performanc­e left a lot to be desired – they were disappoint­ing in the final third as they had no more than two shots on target, none of which troubled the Yanga goalkeeper – the result will show that they were victors.

The pedantic football fan will argue that the official result of the match is a draw. Fair enough. But it was a knockout and Sundowns scored more in the shoot-out than Yanga.

Perhaps what should concern Mokwena is that his team found it hard against a team not regarded as one of the continent’s top sides.

As it was, Sundowns were fortunate not to have conceded at home with Yanga’s Aziz Ki seeing his shot from close range beating Williams and then ricochetin­g off the underside of the crossbar and going back into play.

Yanga coach Miguel Gamondi was adamant the attempt should have been given as a goal – the Argentinia­n who formerly coached Sundowns saying “the people who were in the VAR destroyed the pride of Tanzania. Can anyone argue with me that we were not robbed? It was a clear, clear goal – yes or no?”

The VAR angles showing the shot weren’t conclusive but it appeared that the decision to disallow the goal was given because the whole circumfere­nce of the ball did not cross the line.

Not that Mokwena was concerning himself too much about that. His worry, though, should be in the fact that his team’s defence was breached with consummate ease for that scoring opportunit­y. He would have to work hard at fixing that as he prepares them for yet another shot at reaching the final following their 2016 triumph.

And the fact that they have avoided what had seemed a quarter-final jinx in two consecutiv­e seasons must be cause for celebratio­n – the manner of breaking the bogey notwithsta­nding.

Mokwena was definitely celebratin­g: “It’s the second successive time we reach the semis, guys, which is very important,” he said.

 ?? Backpagepi­x ?? RONWEN Williams of Mamelodi Sundowns celebrates victory with teammates during the CAF Champions League. |
Backpagepi­x RONWEN Williams of Mamelodi Sundowns celebrates victory with teammates during the CAF Champions League. |

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