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With a Fifa world ranking of 90 and the unwanted distinction of being the lowest ranked country to ever qualify for the World Cup, albeit as hosts, Bafana Bafana are possibly the worst side to ever take part in a World Cup.

To point this out is not to try and demoralise a nation, but merely to underline the uphill battle that South Africa — Bafana Bafana — face at the biggest soccer spectacle in the world. Bafana first qualified for the World Cup in 1998 and repeated the feat four years later in Korea/Japan, where they got their first win, but both times failed to negotiate past the group stages.

The past decade has seen the national team in decline since the highs of the 90s. They won the African Cup of Nations in 1996 and even managed to hold a World Cup and European championship-winning French team to a credible 0-0 draw at Soccer City in 2000, which was Carlos Queiroz’s first game in charge.

Bafana fans hope that 2010 will be the year the national team reverses its fortunes. Dreams that with the sea of green and gold, lots of noisy vuvuzelas and a packed Soccer City, anything can happen and maybe then they can defy all odds and qualify from Group A, a group including France, Uruguay and Mexico.

Since playing very well in last year’s Confederations Cup, they have struggled for goals ever since, drawing or losing matches to Iceland, Norway, Serbia, Germany and the like. Looking at the calibre of players available for the national team, one can understand why they have struggled in recent times. The only names recognised worldwide are Everton’s Steven Pienaar and West Ham’s Benni McCarthy, who hasn’t seen much game-time this season.

So far we can acknowledge that goals have been south Africa’s biggest problem, Katlego Mphela is by far the nation’s main goal threat but he has not hit the net since the turn of the new year, in the domestic league and for the national team. His other strike partners, McCarthy and Twente Enschede’s Bernard Parker, have struggled for game-time at their clubs. To stand a chance of progressing from Group A, every set piece available to them is going to be crucial to getting goals.

The team’s main focus and talisman is Pienaar, a two-footed playmaker who is a graduate of the famous Ajax Academy, first with Ajax Cape Town in South Africa and then Ajax Amsterdam in The Netherlands. He will be the fulcrum of South Africa’s attack in June-July. No matter how slim their chances are, Bafana will hope that coach Carlos Alberto Parreira can conjure up the right combination, tactics and with a sprinkle of some Samba magic, cause a shock or two.

Parreira has been around the football block for a while, one of the first coaches to lead four different nations (Kuwait — 1982, UAE — 1990, Brazil — 1994/2006 and Saudi Arabia — 1998) to the soccer World Cup and Bafana will be his fifth. His second coming hasn’t been the most fruitful but the nation hopes that magic can be weaved between now and June 11 when they face Mexico in the opening match.

They might rank as outsiders, but they might take a leaf from one of the biggest underdog stories of recent times — South Korea’s run to the semi-finals eight years ago. They didn’t have any stars, just a group of players put together from their domestic league or their neighbours, the Japanese league, with one or two players plying their trade in Europe. Many feared the Koreans, under Dutchman Guus Hiddink, would struggle to win a match, let alone escape the group, but they were to embark on a fairytale run that made the world stand up and take notice. They shocked big teams like Spain and Italy en route to finishing fourth in the world soccer showpiece, for now we can say that anything can happen.




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5 Responses to “Rank outsiders with no hope”

The difference between South Korea and Bafana is that South Korea had a much better work rate, superb fitness levels and good organization. Even if you are short on talent if you have these qualities you are still in with a chance. The problem is bafana not only lack enough talent but all of the above.

The only thing bafana have going for them is that they are playing at home. Other than that they need nothing less than a miracle.

(Report abuse)

Tshibudu on May 4th, 2010 at 6:01 pm

South Korea played a hard-running attacking game, ably supported by supreme fitness and a never-say-die attitude.

All this is missing from Bafana’s repertoir!

Whenever there is doubt in their minds (and that is frequently) - they pass the ball back, back all the way to the goal-keeper and that from a free-kick nogal!

My best projection is that if we are lucky we may draw 1 or 2 games and that’s all she wrote.

(Report abuse)

Michael K on May 5th, 2010 at 7:29 am

With all due respect, and I may just be an eternal optomist, but I find it difficult to agree with most of the media out there, including this article.
Not many nations have been in our situation. We have not played our First choice XI since the Confederations Cup (and there were questions whether that was our best 1st team either.) But since the Confed Cup, injuries have kept Itumeleng Khune, Steven Pienaar, Kagiso Dikgacoi, Benni McCarthy, Matthew Booth, amongst others from playing together at any point.
Since our failure to to qualify for the African Cup of Nations, we have played only 4 competitive games that would really effect our world ranking and that was the win, draw and 2 narrow losses (to the no 1 and 2 teams in the world, Brazil and Spain) at the Confed Cup. Every other fixture has been a friendly, and so despite even a good win or 2, our ranking has continued to slide. Since Mr Pareira’s return, the most important thing is we haven’t lost an international game in a year. Not losing is the first step to creating the correct momentum.
Too often in the past, South Africa have actually dominated matches only to lose to a set piece goal, and this is something we are rectifying.
I for one though am happy to have the team underestimated by the likes of France, Uruguay and Mexico (who co-incidentally our third choice team beat 3-1 in the USA in our last encounter).
The South African media have a field day criticising Bafana Bafana, so often comparing them to our successful rugby and cricket sides, but they do forget that FIFA have more members than the UN while rugby and cricket both really have no more than 15 competitive teams.
I will wait and see on June 12th how we perform and whether players like Tsepo Masilela, Siphiwe Tshabalala, Teko Modise, Katlego Mphela and Khune can live up to the belief I have in them. Add Pienaar, McCarthy, Aaron Mokoena, Macbeth Sibaya, Dikgacoi, Bernard Parker, Siboniso Gaxa, Bryce Moon and a few of the others to the mix and I believe South Africa may shock a few. One of them however won’t be me.

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Rob Delport on May 5th, 2010 at 9:13 pm

[…] Sud-Africains n’ont pas tellement confiance en leur sélection. Joseph Misika affirme même sur son blog que l’Afrique du Sud « est sûrement l’équipe la plus faible à […]

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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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