The Star Early Edition

City could find their once-promising season imploding

- RODNEY REINERS

BENNI MCCARTHY was left pulling his hair out in frustratio­n as his Cape Town City side’s woes in front of goal continued unabated.

City lost 2-0 to Baroka FC in Polokwane on Tuesday despite dominating the entire 90 minutes. They squandered chance after chance – and, as the frustrated former Bafana Bafana striker commented afterwards, “some of the chances even my grandmothe­r could have put in”.

City have now lost four on the trot – Sundowns, Chiefs, Wits and Baroka – and, if they don’t turn things around, they could find their oncepromis­ing season imploding rather spectacula­rly. The opportunit­y to get back on track is tomorrow night when they host Chippa United in a PSL fixture at Athlone Stadium (8pm kickoff), with McCarthy desperate for his players to show some composure and decisivene­ss in and around the penalty area.

There is no doubt the team has been playing well. The build-ups are confident, the team work swift and smooth, and numerous scoring chances are created; it’s just the final finish that is lacking. Against Baroka, the Capetonian­s missed a plethora of opportunit­ies, and there wasn’t just one culprit: Judas Moseamedi, Craig Martin, Lyle Lakay, Thami Mkhize, Thabo Nodada and Shane Roberts, nobody could stick the ball into the net.

“You can play beautiful football, dominate for 90 minutes, and entertain the crowd,” said McCarthy. “But if you don’t put the ball in the back of the net you won’t win games – and that is the story of our season. We played nice football (against Baroka) and I could count at least five chances that I think even my grandmothe­r could have put in.

“And then, when you don’t put the ball in the back of the net, no matter how good your team plays, how organised the team is, when you make two mistakes it costs you two goals. That, unfortunat­ely, is how it is – if you don’t score goals, you don’t win football games. It becomes difficult and now we have a mountain to climb again. So, for us, it’s back to the drawing board, we have to continue to push forward.”

On the plus side for City and McCarthy, the performanc­e of left wing Lakay was something for the team to build on as they prepare to face Chippa tomorrow. The 26-year-old was the creative hub of everything, drilling in pin-point crosses to set up opportunit­ies for teammates. They just, unfortunat­ely, couldn’t make the most of it. McCarthy will be demanding more of the same from Lakay tomorrow, and then hope the team’s fortunes in front of goal change.

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