The Mercury

I have failed as a coach, says Ntseki

- ESHLIN VEDAN eshlin.vedan@inl.co.za

MOLEFI Ntseki says he has “failed” as Bafana Bafana coach after the “huge disappoint­ment” of failing to qualify for the 2021 African Cup of Nations.

After playing out to a 1-1 draw with Ghana last Thursday, Ntseki’s charges required only a point against Sudan at the Al-Hilal Stadium in Khartoum but ended up going downed 2-0.

“It is a big disappoint­ment for all of us. We started off positively and were looking forward to qualifying. If you look at the games that we won, we became very confident.

“The expectatio­ns were that we would do well against Ghana at home and against Sudan away.

“We made things difficult by drawing against Ghana at home as we had to come to Sudan facing foreign challenges,” said Ntseki.

Considerin­g Sudan’s lowly ranking of 127 in the world, Bafana Bafana would have certainly fancied themselves to come home from the Northeaste­rn African nation with a point. However, they clearly did not execute their plans properly as Malik Bakhit opened the scoring for the home side after just five minutes before Abdelrahma­n Yousif doubled the lead for the Secretaryb­irds after 32 minutes.

“We tried hard to put everything together after our analysis of Sudan.

We started on the wrong foot as we conceded early.

“The idea was not to concede because we were fully aware that we were in with a chance prior to kickoff as we had points. We allowed the Sudanese to get maximum points and conceding two goals in the first half was a setback,” said Ntseki.

Ntseki’s job will now be on the line and it will be surprising if he does emerge with his job intact after the South African Football Associatio­n (Safa) conducts their review of his performanc­e. The 51-year-old was a surprise appointmen­t when he succeeded Stuart Baxter in August 2019.

He has neverthele­ss accepted responsibi­lity for the national team’s failure to secure a spot in Cameroon, which marks their fourth failure to qualify for the continenta­l showpiece since 2010.

“The objective from Safa was clear, to qualify for every continenta­l and world tournament to put Bafana Bafana on the map again in terms of the football we play and the results we get.

“My disappoint­ment is huge for my personal growth and my achievemen­ts as coach of Bafana. The success of the team is my success and in failure it starts with me to say that I’ve failed as a coach,” said Ntseki.

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