Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

I don’t watch football... it bores me, says Bafana defender Mobara

- NJABULO NGIDI

THE sport that helps Abbubaker Mobara support his livelihood, took him away from the dangerous streets of Mitchells Plain, made him an Olympian who squared off against Neymar and turned him into a household name bores him.

“I don’t watch football at all…it bores me. 30 minutes of it and I fall asleep. I tried before.

“Analysing games is different but watching it at home is boring. I would rather switch off the TV and do something else. Football doesn’t excite me,” said the Orlando Pirates’ all-rounder

If football bores him, then why does he play it?

“Good question. I am still searching for the answer to why I am playing it. It could be because I am passionate about football. It’s something that I love…to play. It’s bad for me not to watch it because I want to learn. Watching it could probably change 50 percent or more of my performanc­e.”

That should be a scary thought for Mobara’s opponents.

Despite not watching the beautiful game, he is one of the smartest footballer­s in the country and any improvemen­t from his game would make him a beast. He is comfortabl­e playing in central midfield, central defence and at right back. But that versatilit­y comes with its complicati­ons, like what exactly is his position.

“It worries me a lot because I am unsure of where should I focus,” Mobara said.

“Do I focus on being a midfielder, central defender or rightback? It’s confusing to move back and forth from those three different positions because they ask different things from you. This creates a situation where I have a lot of things in my head.”

There’s only one thing on the heads of those associated with the Buccaneers tonight.

Can they right the wrongs of last season – their worst campaign in the PSL-era – and make up for that disappoint­ment by bringing joy to the Ghost?

Chippa United at Orlando Stadium stands in the way of that in the club’s opening Premiershi­p match. New coach Milutin “Micho” Sredojevic has been working on toughening up the players mentally.

“It’s difficult to forget what happened in the past and focus on the new season because we still have that disappoint­ment at the back of our heads,” Mobara said.

“For us to fix it, we must work on the training fields to push hard. If you do well at training by nature you will do well on the field because training is preparatio­n for what you will face on the field.

“If you mess around here, you will mess around in the match. Maybe last season a few of us weren’t hungry enough. We were too playful last season and that’s why the results were like that. The reality is that this is our work. This is what puts food on the table so we have to be serious about it.”

Mobara’s debut season with the Buccaneers was bitter-sweet. He finally joined a big team with a large following but he didn’t have much time to celebrate as Pirates slumped to one disappoint­ment after another – hammered 6-0 by Mamelodi Sundowns, 6-1 by SuperSport United before Matsatsant­sa a Pitori outclassed them 4-1 in the Nedbank Cup final.

The 23- year- old shone nonetheles­s, impressing Pirates’ legend Lucky Lekgwathi to tip Mobara as his preferred candidate to replace Oupa Manyisa as captain.

“To be honest with myself, there is still a small kid inside of me trying to grow up – not just in football but also in my life. It wouldn’t be bad for me to be the captain at my age but there is also a lot more for me to learn.

“This is a big club. There is 80 years of history which is something like 80kg on your shoulder as captain. But we grow in tough situations.”

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