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

By Siphiwe Hlongwane

There seems to be a big problem brewing between technical directors and head coaches in South African football. With the new PSL season looming on the horizon, a number of coaces have lost their jobs and are seemingly being replaced by the very same technical directors who were appointed to assist them.

As I am writing this article I feel especially bad for Neil Tovey. The former Bafana Bafana defender was this week shown the door by AmaZulu, despite guiding the side to their first cup final in two decades this past season. It was clear that tovey, together with his assistant Calvin Peterson, were starting to get things right at Usuthu; the team was starting to compete for trophies again.

There are rumours circulating that Tovey’s departur was hastened by the breakdown in his relationship with Amazulu’s technical director Roger Palmgren. Tovey was even quoted in the media as saying that Palmgren is the reason that he was fired and went on to state that Palmgren does not have a clue about football and he will take the team nowhere.

It’s a pity that somehow coaches and the so called technical directors can’t find a way to work together. It seems as if half the time technical directors are there to take over or act as watchdogs to coaches instead of putting their expertise together to take South African football forward. Thus it is no surprise that the national team performs so badly because the people meant to take the game forward are dragging it backwards with petty politics.

Administrators and club owners themselves are also not without blame. Too often owners want to meddle in the business end of the game and it is time for them to leave the running of the teams to the professionals.

To finish this off, I would like to congratulate Tovey for a job well done at Amazulu, although he had his ups and downs, he really managed to push the team to better heights during his time. Manqoba Mngqithi has taken over the coaching reigns and hopefully he will not suffer the same fate as Tovey.




Related Posts

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