The Citizen (Gauteng)

Pitso still raves about structures in place at Downs

- Jonty Mark

Pitso Mosimane (right) has won a treble in two different countries in under a year, a feat that is most-likely unpreceden­ted in the modern game.

The former Mamelodi Sundowns head coach won the Egyptian Cup with Al-Ahly over the weekend, beating El Gaish, the conquerors of Zamalek in the semifinals, in a penalty shoot-out in the final at the Borg El Arab Stadium, adding to their Egyptian Premier League title and the Caf Champions League.

This followed a 2019/20 season at Sundowns in which Masandawan­a won the Telkom

Knockout, the DStv Premiershi­p and the Nedbank Cup.

If you take into account that the Telkom Knockout final win over Maritzburg United was on 14 December, that is six trophies sealed in under 12 months, an astonishin­g achievemen­t by any standard.

The caveat, of course, is that the Egyptian Premier League was sealed by the time Mosimane arrived at Ahly in October, while he also only had to get through the semifinals and final of the Caf Champions League.

Neverthele­ss, the fact that “Jingles” did exactly this, winning Ahly their first Champions League in seven years, is no small feat.

Ahly are unbeaten since Mosimane joined them, and there could yet be another trophy this week, with the Red Devils set to face RS Berkane in the Caf Super Cup final on Thursday, though the Moroccan side have protested the decision to play the game in the Egyptian capital Cairo.

Mosimane, meanwhile, clearly also has an eye back home on Sundowns, where Manqoba Mngqithi and Rulani Mokwena, with a dose of Steve Komphela too, have guided the team to the top of the DStv Premiershi­p.

The Ahly coach claimed that Mngqithi could really just relax and do nothing, with the structure he had put in place.

“The All Blacks say you must leave the jersey in a better place than you found it and no one at Sundowns can say they had to start again,” Mosimane told the South African Football Journalist­s Associatio­n.

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