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

Last season SuperSport United retained their PSL title with 16 wins from 30 games. That is a win ratio of 53% and they also lost 7 games, 4 of them at home. That translates to a loss ratio of close to 25% overall and 27% at home. They scored 45 goals and conceded 22 on their way to that triumph. That’s a ratio of 1.5 goals a match scored and 0.75 conceded. Hardly the stuff of a dominant team that.

By comparison English champions Man Utd won 28 of 38 matches (74%) lost just the 4 matches for a loss ratio of 11%. Three of those losses came away from home (11%) and they scored 68 goals (1.8 goals per game) en route to their hat-trick title. In Spain, Barcelona won 27 of 38 matches (71%) and scored 105 goals for a staggering 2.76 goals per game average, they also lost just twice at home over 38 matches. A league that compares somewhat favourably is in Brazil — Sao Paulo won the Brasileiro with a 55% (21 wins from 38 matches) win ratio, losing just 5 matches (just the one at home) for a loss ratio of 13% and scoring 66 goals at a rate of 1.75 a game. The Brazil league of course has the caveat of continuously haemorrhaging world-class talent to the lure of the European leagues.

Matsatsa’s preceding title also came with a 50% win ratio, a 1.3 goals-scored-per-game ratio, 0.87 conceded and a 27% loss ratio. Now of course they still did better than all the other teams who faced the same fixtures against the same teams, so fair play to them for managing to do so twice in succession. What the numbers above tell though is of a league deeply mired in mediocrity.

The last time a team won the league with any measure of authority was in the swashbuckling years of the 1997-2000 Sundowns team under Ted Dumitru and then Paul Dolezar, who won the league with a 68% win ratio (this in a 34-game fixture list) and the last of those titles in 1999-2000 was achieved while the team scored 2 goals a game, conceded an average of 1 a game and 11 points ahead of second-placed Orlando Pirates. Since then there has been a succession of teams who have come out on top by virtue of being less mediocre than those below them.

There are those who say this points to a league where there is an even spread of depth, talent and tactical nous. But everybody knows that even in the era of megabucks swilling around the PSL pool there are still a handful of clubs who posses a financial clout far greater than everyone else, and I’m not just talking about the shopaholics otherwise known as Patrice Motsepe’s Sundowns here. There are also very few coaches who have brought enough stability and success to their teams for an argument to be made for technical nous being ubiquitous in the league. As for depth in talent, really? Seriously? In a league where a player has been top goalscorer despite playing only half a season? Where a scoring run lasting but a dozen games can make one a shoo-in for top goalscorer after 30 games, half of whom are played at home?

The PSL is in my view, made up of largely okay teams playing okay football more often than not. The problem is every now and then we see dazzling footballing spectacles that get us all excited at a supposed buffet of sumptuous football that is often nothing but a mirage. For every goalless 52-pass movement by Sundowns you have a thoroughly outplayed Kaizer Chiefs almost scoring from their first touch of the ball. Is that quality to you?

SA football has a lot of potential. I say that mostly because I want to believe it. Every year in the PSL thus far has produced a new star set that takes a season by the scruff of its neck. From George Koumantarakis and Jerry Sikhosana in the mid 90s to the Godfrey Sapulas, Mbulelo Mabizelas, Jabu Pules, Collins Mbesumas, King Khunes and the current would be king — Teko Modise. What the PSL needs now is a team to do the same. Sundowns have done it before. My own beloved Orlando Pirates threatened to do so under Kosta Papic before that (almost) predictably fizzled out when it came to the crunch. But by and large the story has been about arch-mediocrities pseudo-lording it over teams that were never more than one or two wins away from usurping them.

How many teams from the PSL era can compare favourably with their forebears from the NSL days? Kaizer Chiefs have averaged about a trophy a season in the PSL era, but how many from the “vat alles” era could walk into the teams from the Jeff Butler days? That is too telling.

That surely cannot have been the dream when SA football marched bravely into the professional era in 1996?




Related Posts
  • None

2 Responses to “Wanted: A giant for the PSL”

Good Article Siya
We are definitely get the raw end of the stick as the fans. Its over-hyped that its good and all that, but is it really? We sign mediocre foreign footballers not that they could be very good. Check the Sundowns of 97-00, had a great midfield general in Feutmba - open a defence with a split pass and a big man in Chukwu - whenever his name was mentioned, teams wondered what to do with him, they were games when he had 3 men on him and then Mudau would score hattricks. Who of our foreigners right now could match that? Maybe our teams should sign players who are internationals with their teams, the EPL signs you if you have played 70% of your national team in the past 2 years unless its a special talent like your Andersons OR Da Silvas.

(Report abuse)

Joe Misika on August 17th, 2009 at 11:37 am

Well stated.

(Report abuse)

Ndumiso Ngcobo on August 17th, 2009 at 4:47 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
Bonga Ntshingila is an avid sports fan,he had a promising youth sports career (as in coaches always promised he would play in the next match,and teammates always promised to moer him if he shanked yet another scoring opportunity).When he realised that maybe he wasn't going to be the next Andre Joubert thanks to a few shortcomings (hand-eye co-ordination,timing,pace (buffet lines excepted) he proceeded to satisfy his huge passion for sport from the stands and immerse himself in in-depth analysis of sport and atheletes.This may (not) have been made even more inviting by the prospect of imbibing a few refreshing beverages while casting a critical eye over the latest choke/cheat/fluke by (insert geographically correct team here) and telling all and sundry just how and why he and only he saw it coming.

Bonga indulges the following sporting passions:

1.Orlando Pirates (no I have never set any stadium on fire)
2. Rugby.anywhere and everywhere it is played on the planet
3. Curling

One of the above may be made up.
Technorati RSS
Siyabonga's links
Newstime
News, Views and incisive analysis. Newstime. All the time.
Newstime
News views and top notch analysis
more posts
Lonwabo Tsotsobe's devastating form against the Bangladeshis should, hopefully, have made the selectors sit up and take note. Having been consigned...
Arsenal have had a topsy-turvy time of it since their calamity against Birmingham in the Carling Cup final a fortnight ago. Victory against Leyton ...
Maybe Jermain Defoe has a future as a soothsayer. Just months after the often misfiring Tottenham Hotspur finisher was derided for saying Harry Re...
Firstly, before Arsenal throw their toys out the cot blaming ref Massimo Busacca, they must remember they had 90 minutes in which all they needed to d...
Only South Africans would, faced with the prospect of having two genuine world-class pivot prospects, seek to align among provincial lines and do thei...
latest activity
Blog Statistics
Total reads 27587
Total comments 357
Siyabonga's tags
advertisement
All material copyright of the author, or the Mail & Guardian, unless otherwise specified
Author Login
Afrigator