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We all had our fears before this tournament about how Bafana would be swamped in a an avalanche of goals. I thought one may have to hide behind the couch as we squirmed in front of the whole world.

But alas, the boys have done us proud. In fact, one can have a reasonable amount of optimism ahead of the real deal next year. But, and this is a big one, there is one prickly little problem that is hindering our progress.

We don’t have the killer instinct in front of goal. Bafana continues to be like a feather-fisted boxer, full of neat flicks and industry, but simply no knockout ability.

The whole country knows that Brazil and Spain were there for the taking.

These were two teams whose stars had one eye on the bikini-laden beaches they are about to spend a short vacation on.

For Bafana, it was a chance to sneak an almighty shock win. But we bottled it.

The move away from the talented but reluctant Oros man that is Benni McCarthy is commendable. Indeed, no one man is bigger than the team.

Not even Benni.

We certainly missed his composure in the box, though. But one simply must move on. Life goes on, and now somebody must use the coming season to throw their name in the hat.

But if we are to survive beyond the first round at 2010, we need goals.

Katlego Mphela’s brace was a bolt from the blue — especially the free-kick!

But what we need is someone who will bury the bread-and-butter chances, because that is an altogether more reliable source.

The best strikers in the world don’t score a lot of wonder goals; they simply bury the half-chances.

Think of Ruud van Nistelrooy, Alan Shearer and Romario. They were deadly in the box, turning half-chances into goals and providing a constant threat to defenders.

South Africa’s biggest threat came from long-range shots, which can be a bit of a lottery.

Teko Modise went missing, or at least looked like he had swapped his normal shooting boots with Ruan Pienaar. He actually resembled a flat-track bully.

Week in and out, he looks like a million dollars in the Premier League but was found wanting against the really big guns.

Maybe he was trying too hard to impress the European scouts but the Pirates lynchpin did not look likely to loot anybody.

But all in all, the signs suggest that Bafana will be more than just good hosts next year.

In Siboniso Gaxa and Tsepo Masilela we have two fantastic, modern fullbacks.

Our midfield, crowded as it is, has held its own against Kaka, Xavi and the rest, so we just need to acquire a spearhead upfront. Because one thing we cannot count on next time around is a group that houses “continental champions” with the powder-puff credentials of New Zealand and Iraq.

Next time, the best of the rest will be in town.

So we better be ready.




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9 Responses to “Wanted: A hitman for Bafana — desperately!”

Definitely someone needs to stand up & be counted upfront. The team was solid all over but you fail to mention Mokoena, he was full of mistakes. Penalty in the Spain game & then the free kick against Brazil. Great defenders dont make such kind of mistakes in consecutive games. Anyhow, great article & a good showing by Bafana Bafana

(Report abuse)

Joe Misika on June 29th, 2009 at 4:38 pm

What is Benni’s beef against playing for his country? When he retires, is he expecting to participate(like coaching) in the Safa structures that he doesn’t care about right now?

Really, what’s his beef?

(Report abuse)

jason on June 29th, 2009 at 4:42 pm

Up ! I co-sign everything you said, in the way you said it too. ‘Great, short and concise commentary !

(Report abuse)

Kholekile Tshunungwa on June 29th, 2009 at 6:00 pm

Bafana really needs a composed striker not we see now,who seem not to know what to do in front of a goal.makoena should pull up his socks otherwise he100% deserve a band.in the ended confed.cup iam not impressed by officiation which favoured big teams.many of the whistle men seemed to good sense of judgement.for nice world cup lets have nice refs.

(Report abuse)

Dennis Kalimbira on June 29th, 2009 at 6:23 pm

Could some-one please explain to the Coach about substitutions. Please NO substitutions at 91 minutes when you are behind!!! against Brazil. Macbeth Sibaya???? not one tackle, But lots of arm flapping!! Did the coach “know” about Mphekla’s “abilities”? Why not use him earlier?
Please next time get Chinese speaking Coach, please. please SAFA.

(Report abuse)

Geepee on June 29th, 2009 at 6:42 pm

Like i wrote somewhere else here, here is Joel Santana’s report card for the Confed Cup : Played 5 matches, won 1, drew 1 ,lost 3 ! That is 4 points out of a possible 15. And we were playing at home ! At international level u get fired for this results.

Dont forget we are not going to Angola next January for the AFCON 2010 tourney because of the self-same Santana!

Somebody please bring me Patrice Motsepe’s firing gun !

(Report abuse)

MKT on June 29th, 2009 at 8:06 pm

I Congratulate Santana for making Bafana Bafana a World class team in such a short time. This team can go far in 2010. Parker requires vigorous training on shooting. He is the best replacement for Benni Mcarthy. Teko Modise was disappointing. Bafana need to learn to pass the BALL instantly and correctly. Hesitancy in passing the ball has cost us loosing the ball to opponents several times. Middle Fielders hold on to the Ball for a long time. PASS, PASS, PASS the Ball guys. Soccer is no longer just a game, there is science and maths involved and intelligent players like for USA can make it better. Lets develop soccer together with School curriculums to produce highly intelligent players. Thumbs up to Bafana

(Report abuse)

Dr Watson on June 30th, 2009 at 8:38 am

Bafana’s 1 win, 1 draw, 3 losses including Semifinal qualification equals sheer luck! I wonder why Gaxa always makes the team, he is highly mobile yes, but he just can’t hit the crosses, & can’t even consistently pass the ball(did anybody see Bafana’s game against New Zealand, the guy was our weakest link).

Santana likes to defend, yerrhh! Why is Elrio van Heerded kept on the bench - what does the guys have to do more? He is a better player than Teko (Elrio can pass the ball & can shoot on target, Teko just can’t do that at the top level).

USA defeated both the African Champions & the European Champions by being offensive. We defeated the weekest team in the tornarment, that was our only recordable achievement! We need a striker yes, but we also need to play an offensive game & subtitute out of form players like Gaxa & them.

(Report abuse)

Zakhele on July 1st, 2009 at 10:12 pm

million dollars i hear you say … and i wonder if that’s the zim sought of which you speak?

the players lack the basic skills i.e. passing, crossing, ball control, shooting on target; we give away possession in the midfield as if we’re being paid in barrack dollars for every stray pass.

and why exactly is BB the only national sporting team that are not required to be representative of our nation’s talented people? perhaps therein lays the answer fellow countrymen.

all in all the stats speak for themselves, spares no feelings and holds no punches however the lads performed to the best of their collective ability but as we all know … sometimes you best just isn’t good enough …

(Report abuse)

RL on July 2nd, 2009 at 12:21 pm

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Lungani Zama is a sports writer at The Witness daily newspaper in Pietermaritzburg, writing mainly on local and international cricket.

He brings an alternative perspective to the English Premier League, and having spent three years in Manchester and Liverpool playing professional cricket, has acquired the necessary passion for this most exciting of soccer leagues. He follows developments religiously, and has no bias as the team he truly supports, Leeds United, is languishing in the 3rd division.
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