« Blog Home
1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars
Loading ... Loading ...

The news spread across the country like wildfire: Benni McCarthy has been left out of South Africa’s final 2010 Fifa World Cup squad.

My hat goes off to Carlos Alberto Parreira for making what must have been a very difficult decision. McCarthy, for all his petulance, is probably the most skilled football player South Africa has when fully fit. However, the fact that he has been munching down the pies and walked a walk that shouted pig-headedness, as if he assumed his inclusion was a sure thing, could have been pointers that swayed Parreira and the technical team’s decision.

Either way, it’s the right call and the ultimate rebuke to McCarthy, who caused more problems off the pitch instead of providing solutions on it. SA might not have any star players apart from the industrious Steven Pienaar, but I take heart in knowing that the 23 men he has picked to represent our country at one of the greatest tournaments of them all would all put their bodies on the line in the name of South Africa. What South Africa deserves is a team that is motivated by the passion brought to the stadiums by the fans, and to this end Bafana Bafana, and Parreira, have given us a fair shake.

I’m sure there will be those who will decry the decision, but somehow I believe that as the sun rises tomorrow, we would have seen and heard the last of McCarthy being anywhere near a Bafana Bafana shirt. For McCarthy, it is a sad end to a promising career that has gone belly up, pun intended, over the last few years. Did he deserve it? Yes. Joel Santana may have been many things, but at least he saw the folly in trying to tempt McCarthy back to the national set-up where the impression given by the UK-based striker is that it’s all about Benni. Goodbye Benni. I will remember the good times fondly, but now is the time for SA to move on.

The Fifa World Cup gets under way in less than 10 days! Wow! Who would have thought the moment has finally arrived for the best footballers on earth to come to South Africa and strut their stuff on African soil. While I have my doubt about the legitimacy of claiming this tournament as Africa’s World Cup, it certainly is ours, the Rainbow Nation’s.

We stand on the brink of something special, and while not everything will run perfectly and there will be problems, was it worth it? You bet your ass it was. Congratulations should go to the Local Organising Committee for:

a) Avoiding Safa’s chronic incompetence as much as humanly possible.
b) Giving South Africans a reason to be inspired (most of us anyway).
c) Getting the job done (mostly … some of those road works were never going to be finished in time but we pretty much knew that).

The time has come and though we can only make a proper judgement once July 12 passes, I’m pretty damn excited. I don’t think we know what is about to hit us. It’s going to be one hell of a party! Good luck to all the teams, especially Bafana Bafana. Make us proud!




Related Posts

3 Responses to “Goodbye Benni”

Benni in the cafeteria, -teria, Nomvete in the 18 area, area! I think the coach a good squad but I am not sure about Booth, Mokoena & Walters…just have to wait and see! Good luck to the coach and the boys. I am in front of you all the way not behind.

(Report abuse)

Mhloti on June 1st, 2010 at 1:00 pm

Benni had his run and it’s time to move on.

The same thing happened to Ronaldo and the same thing will happen to current “greats” when their time is up. Now we need to support the team, like you said they are definitely going to surprise most (I know we’re keeping the cup on this sacred soil).

http://letterdash.com/stanfordgibson/does-your-lack-of-support-for-bafana-make-you-a-horrible-parent

(Report abuse)

Stanford Gibson on June 2nd, 2010 at 8:19 am

I was very happy to see him gone. I still have not forgiven him and Quinton Fortune for getting Shakes Mashaba fired because they wanted everything in Bafana Bafana to be about them.

What goes around comes around.

I think Benni had some very bad advisors early in his career, when things were going well for him.

(Report abuse)

MySon on June 2nd, 2010 at 1:52 pm

Leave a Reply

All comments must be approved by our editors, click here to read the editorial guidelines for comments. Please allow some time for our editors to approve your comment after posting.

Send me the Thought Leader daily newsletter

profile
A journalist by trade, Adam takes an interest in sports, politics, communication and media trends.

Having lived in Cape Town and Melbourne, Adam is back in Johannesburg, his home town.

The views expressed are his own.

twitter: adamwake86
Technorati RSS
Adam's links
Cricinfo
Your modern cricket companion
cricket with balls
A great website, which shows cricket's more humourous side
Just Blog Off!
A blog about the ridiculousness of blogging. A rant about the twits on twitter. A journal of other things that happen in the 'real world'. An oft-used musical soapbox.
My portfolio
If you would like to see other work by this contributor, or are interested in employing his services.
rugby365
For all your rugby news.
The Analyst
Former Middlesex seamer Simon Hughes getting into cricket's finer points.
The Question
An excellent look into the technical, tactical and realities of modern football
more posts
Howard Webb isn't very popular in the blue part of London right now. The burly referee, a policeman, had a hand in awarding Manchester United two pena...
Detective Jimmy McNulty once said in The Wire, when referring to lives on the street versus the way politics interacts with those lives, "It just ne...
South Africa won their first Test series at home since beating Bangladesh in 2008 after two dominant displays at Centurion and Newlands, plus being ta...
Journalism allows you the opportunity to see, hear and read a lot of different opinions on how sports teams overcome tough patches to eventually trium...
With 2011 done and dusted, it's time for some cheer to be spread among those sportsman and suits who, in a nutshell, didn't say "The boys are disappoi...
latest activity
Blog Statistics
Total reads 68925
Total comments 762
Adam's tags
advertisement
All material copyright of the author, or the Mail & Guardian, unless otherwise specified
Author Login
Afrigator