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Everybody loves a winning team but then Bafana are just not doing it. The current Bafana Bafana set-up is not the greatest since South Africa’s re-admission to international football in 1992. A lot of questions have to be asked: who are the best coaches to lead the national team? Is local good or do we need to go international as we have done in recent times? Is the national football body, South African Football Association, or the Premier Soccer League to blame? Do we have to point a finger at the Premier Soccer league for not doing enough in terms of development and establishing a reserve league? What is happening to the country’s development structures?

Firing coaches

The rapid firing of coaches hasn’t really helped the national set-up. So far evidence doesn’t favour the national body. Coaches have been fired on the eve of big tournaments, Clive Barker was discarded in December 97 just a few weeks before the beginning of the 1998 African Nations Cup. Carlos Queiroz was dismissed on the eve of the 2002 African Nations Cup even with a very good record of having qualified the team for both the World Cup and the nations cup. In 2004, on the eve of yet another nations cup, Shakes Mashaba was dismissed because he didn’t want to give some of his overseas-based players more time with their clubs until just a few days before the tournament kicked off. He had the right to do that because Fifa law stipulates that all players called up by their national teams for Fifa-recognised tournaments have to report 14 days prior to the tournament kick-off. South Africa is on 13 coaches in 15 years or so, which means that every coach had on average, a year and 2 months to work with the national team. Look at this:

Coaching contracts

If you look at the established super powers of world football, their coaches are never offered 2-year contracts as is done here, they get 4+ years. Coaches need time to build their own teams and identify their own players so that they can play to their philosophy. Sven-Goran Eriksson led England from 2001 to 2006 leading them to quarterfinals at two World Cups and one Euro tournament. Fabio Capello has been enjoying success recently with the England team, it was the same team that was constructed by Eriksson. Carlos Dunga was made the coach of Brazil after the 2006 world cup with the mandate of leading them to 2010. He experimented with the team when he took over but after a while he settled for one that did the job for him and recently won the 2009 Confederations Cup. It just goes to show that if coaches are given more time to build their own team, they can be a success. If a coach is given a contract after a World Cup to lead the team to the next one, obviously they will be pitfalls along the way but we have to let them lead that team to the next World Cup.

Local vs foreign

Statistics have proven that local is best for Bafana. Local coaches have enjoyed more success when leading the team than foreign coaches. Barker who is South Africa’s longest serving and most successful coach played 43 matches, won 22, drew 9 and lost 12. He had a 51.2% success rate. Trott Moloto coached Bafana 34 times, won 17 matches, drew 9 and lost 8 with a success percentage of 46 whereas Shakes Mashaba led the team in 20 matches, won 12, drew 5 and lost 3 with a success rate of 60%. Foreign coaches don’t have that much success. Stuart Baxter led Bafana to 23 matches, he won 10 matches, drew 6 and lost 7 with a success rate of 43.5%. Queiroz coached Bafana to 20 matches, winning 9, drawing 7 and losing 4 with a success percentage of 45 and lastly Philippe Troussier led Bafana to 6 matches winning none, drawing 4 and losing 2 with a 0% success. If we add all the figures Bafana have a 52.4% of performing better with a local coach at the helm than 29.5% in the hands of a foreign coach.

Player development

There are a lot of players that seem to be falling through the cracks especially with the junior national teams and some talents that go unnoticed and wasted. Development structures have to be built in each province then coaches from each go all over the province doing trials for players from as young as 8 years old. Then they are roped into this structures, use this structures to secure all the promising young players for the future of the national team. Argentina used the same model where Jose Pekerman went to all corners of Argentina to search for talent, results were there for all to see as Argentina has won 5 of the last 7 world youth cups. What happened to the Under-23 team that was at Sydney Olympics in 2000, they should be the backbone of the team right now or the Under-20 that had the likes of Steven Pienaar and Nasief Morris. They should be some of the players representing the national team right now but so far from that group it’s only Pienaar. Clubs are also not doing their bit to produce young players for the national team. Maybe a subsidised scheme needs to be put in place with club youth structures. Some clubs just can’t cope with running a soccer academy because of the costs involved. But then they are given some money for development. Producing one player a year for their senior team could lessen the burden on poor clubs. At the end of the day, more needs to be done for grassroots soccer and then we will see the results start to trickle all the way from the Under-17 national team to the senior national team.

Hope

Although besieged by all this problems, there is hope. We can take heart from the shock Greece caused at Euro 2004 by winning when nobody had tipped them to go even beyond the first round. There is also the run of South Korea to the semi-finals when they were hosts in 2002 or the Turkish team that reached the semi-final of Euro 2008 against all odds when they didn’t have their talisman in Nihat Kahveci or midfield maestro in Emre Belozoglu robbed of their talents because of injuries. At the end of the day, we need heroes in the current Bafana team, someone needs to stand up and be counted. We shouldn’t be crying foul saying that so and so are not available. With the Bafana class of 96, it didn’t matter who played, they had Doctor Khumalo, Philemon Masinga, John “Shoes” Moshoeu and Mark Williams to name just a few who stood up to be counted when it mattered. We will have to be patient and wait for that miracle to hit us.




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3 Responses to “The Bafana puzzle: All is not lost”

Well, good piece and simply told. I think that our soccer is a reflection of our skewed self perception as a people. Our soccer is trying very hard to reach international standards, which, it seems that many people forget that we have long had international exposure, Kaiser, to Jomo, Ace and so on. We have long had this fascination with people like prof. Mazei(I hope I have the name right) to now. Look, you cannot try and ape other peoples life-styles at the expense of your national pride and people. We are so pre-occupied trying to be like the British, Brazilians, and so on. We cannot be and will never be. Like you said, we should concentrate on our own soccer academies and grassroots soccer talent. Our local soccer coaches understand the style and the expectation, language and culture of their own players. The thugs who run these top local teams should be replaced with a body that deals, through FIFA, with selecting and preparing local talent and the whole soccer scene. Right now, it’s a dog eat-eat-dog South Africa with everyone working for self-interests and damn anyone else. It is clear from you stats that foreign players and foreign coaches are not doing well. This says something about us: we do not know our s–it. We are a confused people at the throes of self-discovery after a horrific existence, and are struggling to find ourselves in our confused state of being free. That’s the truth! We are stuck with some new democracy, and lack of will and discipline, and to be brutally honest, we suck! Until we come to terms with ourselves and how the new South Africa ought to be like. Right now we are a caricature of our former selves. We know very well, that from Kaiser, to Jomo, Chipa, Yster, Banks, Rhee, Shakes Banda, Maria Maria to the generation of Dr Khumalo, we are really puny soccer player nowadays. Our players need to train more and harder, and invest some commitment to local soccer. Everybody is rushing forth to grab the money bag and drink from the waning gravy train. Our messed-up international team is a reflection of our chaotic, stressful and struggling society. Everybody is hobnobbing with some fat cats from overseas of the millionaire Johannesburgers and so forth. I do not want no need to sound politically correct, but until the day we take pride in our culture, people, sports, arts, and existence as the indigenous of Mzantsi, we will never succeed, no matter what anyone says. We have to begin to be ourselves, very soon!

(Report abuse)

mgeve on October 2nd, 2009 at 4:48 am

Thanks Mgeve.

At the end of the day we have to look at ourselves as a soccer nation and wonder where we are going. Development is not taken seriously in this country. You rememba a few years back after the PSL financial & marketing committee negotiated that 1.6 billion rand sponsorship deal with Supersport, then after that revelations came out that they were entitled to 5% - 10% or somethign like that from the money. How about officials stop putting funny clauses in their contracts and concetrate on the bigger picture.

If we take that 10%, its going to be 160 million rands. How many soccer stars can be produced from that much, probably a lot. We can run a dozen academies from that. The money can also be used to run a reserve league, were there is a blend of experience and youth. The stars coming back from injury can be eased into the game from there and up and coming youngsters can be given a chance to play with some of their heroes. There are a lot of Ideas that can be covered for taking our soccer forward.

Right now we know that players are not getting the right instructions on the pitch. The coach doesnt know english and there is a great chance that the message can be distorted when translated through someone. With Local coaches we know we are safe, if a player speaks Zulu, the coach then will speak to them in Zulu & the message will be received. At the end of the day it all falls down to administration.

(Report abuse)

Joe Misika on October 2nd, 2009 at 8:27 am

Jomo and others grew up in the Orlando East dirt grounds and were not wearing any Corks(Soccer boots) They used to tie themselves with Creep bandages on their feet. They were lucky if Orlando Pirates doled out some worn-out skippers. We used to have D, C, B and A divisions playing in our grounds(now they have built an unused school in two of them, and the other one is using grass donated from Orlando stadium and was not used for some time. We had legions of young boys and young men playing for nothing but for the sake of the game. We did not have all the trappings of soccer today, but love for the game. Now, you talk about R160 million and what could be done with that. Well, so long the egg-heads and drug and dope-fins like Kaiser and Khoza rule the nest, we are going nowhere fast. Our boys do not understand the discipline of gym, teamwork, ‘camping’ in order to present our best soccer for the fans and world respect. Most of our people are sold to short-cuts in life. Our players, with earrings on the torsos, look for high and crazy paydays, when they flim-flam on the field. This is not good enough and unconscionable. I am disgusted with our self-appointed robber barons who run these team, and am ashamed of our puny soccer players, who are ill-disciplined and unable to play, let alone score. You remember, Rhee Skosana scored a bullet in the Black Eleven vs the White Eleven, and was dis-allowed- man! That is still killing me inside. Anyway, mfowethu, I like your article and smart responses. Keep up the good work. I will keep on reading your articles. Keep on keeping on!

(Report abuse)

mgeve on October 2nd, 2009 at 5:41 pm

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Joseph Misika is a web applications developer at the Mail&Guardian Online. He has been working there for just under 3 years now but has been playing around with web applications for more years than that.

A student at heart and always looking to learn new stuff. He is currently focused on web development, linux (think there is more to linux than we know) and gaming (Playstation). His interests range from sports to development. In the future looking to build a media & technology empire. Favourite teams are Mamelodi Sundowns (SA) and Manchester United (abroad).
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