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

By Lesedi Dibakwane

South Africans are passionate about their sport. Naturally our football over the past few weeks has evoked an outpouring of emotions and stirred up great debate. There has been chatter about our lack of quality on the field and a general displeasure with any suggestion that we lack the relevant experience off the field as well.

The “massacre in Soweto” on Saturday went a long way towards dispelling both assertions. I dare say that this was the best final in South African football that I have witnessed in recent times. Keeping in mind the teams Ajax beat to reach the final, and the manner in which they dispatched of their opposition in those occasions (Ajax defeated both Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs in decisive fashion to reach this final) Ajax is no fickle opposition at all. They would have been worth every cent of that R8 million, had they won it.

Credit has to go to the Arrows players and their highly impressive coach, Manqoba Mngqithi. The deadly combination of sublime skill and tactical application displayed on the night is a rare sight. We have become accustomed to players lacking the tactical discipline to drive the advantage home when they are in a commanding position. Arrows’ players stuck to the game plan and executed with precision and a ruthlessness that we often only see on television in the English Premier League and other European leagues. The other bane of most coaches’ existence is the tendency to play for the gallery when teams are a mere 2-0 up. None of that on Saturday. Arrows were at full throttle for the entire game, never taking the foot off the pedal. Ajax had no idea what had hit them. Wave upon wave of attacks was enough to make sure Ajax would never settle into the game, despite Ajax controlling ball possession by 52%. There again, overwhelming testimony to the fact that possession means nothing unless utilised.

I was impressed by the Arrows players’ tactical discipline, not only to keep prodding in attack, but to keep shape at the back and in the middle. That is something we seldom witness when PSL teams are in the driving seat. Often caution is thrown to the wind with all the players wanting to join the “mjike Joe” festivities.

Siyabonga Sangweni and Joseph Musonda continued to keep the backline organised while the midfielders covered for Musonda whenever he ventured forward. Now, if the display from Arrows, which had only three foreign players involved in Saturday’s match (substitute Francis Kombe included), is not sufficient to prove that we have the players to deliver then I am not sure what is.

The greatest praise should probably be accorded to Mngqithi. He annihilated a quality team. The defeat, in my view, was a tactical defeat. Mngqithi and his team managed to accurately identify Ajax’s weaknesses — chief among them their robotic central defence pairing — and exploit them successfully. Jan Pruijn failed to respond accordingly when the writing was on the wall in the first half already. Mngqithi (a greenhorn by coaching standards) has taken an unfancied team and turned them into a force. He has not only managed to get the players to gel but to apply our South African style of play without sacrificing tactical discipline and killer instinct. He has an insatiable appetite for goals, complaining in a post-match interview that there should have been at least 10 goals. That is the killer instinct that has been lacking in our game and clearly manifested in the perilous struggles of our national team.

Mngqithi’s success on Saturday was a much-needed loud message to the boys at Soccer City that we have the technical acumen in the country.

We might never quite appreciate what Golden Arrows did for football in this country at Orlando Stadium on Saturday. With confidence at an all-time low with our misfiring national team and a professional league that does not inspire much confidence, this might just be what the doctor ordered with less than 230 days to the 2010 World Cup.

Lesedi Dibakwane is an IT salesperson who works for one of SA’s top ICT companies. He is an avid sports lover and future club owner.




Related Posts
  • None

3 Responses to “Soweto massacre: Just what the doctor ordered”

The most impressive thing is that Mngqithi lost two quality central midfielders at the beginning of the season in Digkacoi and Zothwane (Fulham and Sundowns. The team is clearly well drilled and disciplined. Nhlanhla Zothwane and Manqana both had an unbelievable game.

(Report abuse)

Michael de Vries on October 27th, 2009 at 12:17 pm

I am not sure if this is still available but there is a money making website offer that you can take advantage of for only a dollar ($1). I guess you can’t really lose with that one huh? Anyway, you can check it out at: http://chilp.it/5fe577

(Report abuse)

Brigette Betances on April 5th, 2011 at 12:14 pm

Have you ever given any thought to martial law and what it could mean to you and your family? The headlines on television continually remind us that our safety isn’t something that’s assured, and that the government doesn’t have the welfare of us American citizens at heart. I think you should take a look at this page: http://x.co/baZQ

(Report abuse)

Jeraldine on December 6th, 2011 at 1:46 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
On our Reader Blog, we invite Sports Leader readers to submit one-off contributions to share their opinions on sport, the business of sport, the politics behind sport or any other field of interest.

If you'd like to contribute, first read our guidelines for submitting material to this blog.
Technorati RSS
more posts
By Muhammad Choonara I was seven years old; I remember Clive Rice and his team being paraded around Kolkata with garlands around their necks. Milli...
By Gavin Moffat A week or three ago I read these words from Scott Martin, which meant little to me at the time. "To be a cyclist is to be a student...
By Chester Thomas It has been two weeks since the Premier League wound up but the memories will linger on until the new season starts unless you ar...
By Gavin Moffat It's not the first time. I've been here before. The enthusiasm. The commitment. The rush of adrenalin. Feeling good about what I’...
By Warren Glam I do love a good story. I'm especially fond of the ones which touch on what you might call heroic motifs -- like the errant knight w...
latest activity
Blog Statistics
Total reads 14497
Total comments 148
Reader's tags
advertisement
All material copyright of the author, or the Mail & Guardian, unless otherwise specified
Author Login
Afrigator