Friday, March 8, 2013

Ntsimbi does not rust: Why Siya Sangweni not Benni McCarthy should be the focal point before Soweto Derby


Wounded Pirates: Benni McCarthy and Siya Sangweni

BENNI McCARTHY’S knee is dominating the headlines again, one day before the biggest crowd in the world gathers at Soccer City for the Soweto derby.

Orlando Pirates fans, with their champions going in to the 90,000-strong cauldron five points adrift of arch-rival Kaizer Chiefs, are understandably confused.

Last night on SportsTalk we dragged Buccaneers coach Roger de Sa out of his late afternoon nap and he told us quite clearly: “Benni is struggling with his knee. He can barely kick a ball.”

But this morning, with Talk Radio 702 running that damning statement as our promo for tonight’s show, Orlando Pirates released a statement from Benni himself saying: “I am back doing full training with the boys and so far all is good.

 “Everyone is working hard at training hoping to make it into the squad. The derby is the biggest match in the local sporting calendar, we all want to be a part of it.”

Attempts to reach Benni for clarification have proved impossible. The last update on his twitter account talks about his recent attachment to boxer Chris van Heerden’s camp at Sandton Convention centre last Saturday night. He says: “Hey everyone hope all is good? Big moment for SA Boxing when the Champ Chris van Heerden take on Hatton in Sandton 2nyt. Come and support “

Benni does concede on the Pirates website: “Obviously the team has been playing together for a while and I was out so, I cannot rush things. It’s up to the technical team. If selected to play I hope to be at my best but if not, then I have to push myself to get in the team for the next upcoming matches.”

For his part De Sa, who has been incredibly forthcoming on our show during the Sea Robbers’ mini-slump, says: "Benni is 35 and is not the same any more. He’s a good professional and we do miss him. We don't just miss him on the field but also in the dressing room.

"You got to understand the injuries take a lot longer to heal and he is more prone to injuries now. Benni has never been the ideal athlete. He is a phenomenal footballer with a great football brain.”

And then this: "His injuries are always genuine, the first one was a hamstring tear that he picked up while he was with Bafana Bafana. He tried to come back earlier and it strained again and so he had to sit out another two to three weeks.

"He came back from the Christmas break looking pretty sharp and we were excited that we will at least have Benni for the second half of the season. Then at one of the training sessions he twisted his knee and tore a ligament in that knee.”

My sources tell me that injury was sustained by a tackle from an over-enthusiastic player on trial at Pirates three weeks ago.

De Sa insists: "It happens. It is football and I will tell you that there is nothing behind it. A lot of people are thinking a lot of things but in this case you can see a scan and if you are a doctor you can read the scan and see what it is.”

With the 4-1 Nedbank Cup upset against Maluti FET College, the 3-2 defeat against Moroka Swallows and this week’s draw against Bloemfontein Celtic to deal with, De Sa is under enormous pressure. Defeat against the AmaKhosi would mean an EIGHT POINT GAP and, quite possibly, the end of a turbulent six-month reign for the Mocambique-born former goalkeeper who has, if nothing else, romped through the opening round of the African Champions League.

But Pirates fans would do well to consider the real injury problem in the Buccaneers’ camp. Siya Sangweni, unarguably the key player in Bafana’s African Cup of Nations campaign with two goals and barely a mistake at the back, is the real problem.

Forget Benni and Moeneeb Josephs, they have become peripheral figures. Both will probably head south for Cape Town Ajax at the end of the season, with leadership needed and a cash-injection from Amsterdam promised if McCarthy returns to the Cape, where it all started.

It’s Sangweni, the cattle-loving centre-back from northern Zululand, who is vital.

Just this minute I have received an SMS from De Sa. I asked him how “Ntsimbi” (“Iron” in Zulu) was in training today. He said: “Will assess tomorrow.”

Before Sangweni’s injury three weeks ago, Pirates were on a run of 13 games undefeated. New goalkeeper Senzo Meyiwe had not conceded in five games and they conceded their first PSL goal at the Orlando Stadium late in the game against Celtic on Wednesday.

Sangweni is VITAL to the Pirates. Both as their defensive lynchpin and a scorer of vital goals, in the marauding Pirates style.

When the world’s biggest crowd gather at Soccer City today, Benni McCarthy’s knee – a factor I raised after a chat with West Ham’s chief coach before the World Cup – will no longer be important.

So that’s it. A late fitness test on Ntsimbi – assuming the Iron does not rust - could decide the PSL title tomorrow.

SportsTalk with Udo Carelse airs every night on www.702.co.za at 8pm, we're on from 7-9pm on Fridays and Sundays.  Listen tonight for Vina Maphosa of Kaizer Chiefs and Mickey Modisane from Orlando Pirates going head-to-head before the derby. Follow my twitter updates on the show from @nealcol using the hashtag #sportstalk

Thursday, March 7, 2013

What the world thinks of the Soweto derby: 30th place for Kaizer Chiefs v Orlando Pirates

ACCORDING to FootballDerbies.com, South Africa's showdown between Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates is not as important as South Africans like to think.

Using a points system based on atmosphere, coverage and attendance, they rate the Turkish showdown between Istanbul's arch-rivals Fenerbahce and Galatasary as the number one local footballing rivalry in the world, just ahead of Argentina's Boca Juniors v River Plate (SuperClasico) and the Old Firm derby in Glasgow between the Roman Catholics of Celtic and the Protestant Rangers (who have just been sent to the bottom tier of Scottish football after financial problems).

El Clasico? Nowhere. That's because they're not LOCAL rivals. They don't both come from the same CITY. The first list below comprises only derbies between NEIGHBOURING sides. In fact, Barcelona SC v Emelec - the big "El Clásico del Astillero" clash in Ecuador - slots in at 11th.

AmaKhosi taking on the Buccaneers rates at just 30th on the FootballDerbies list - but that's still way ahead of the Manchester derby (44) and the Merseyside derby (49). Given the game on Saturday is a sell out and Soccer City has a capacity of 94,736, there is no question where the BIGGEST game will be this weekend.

The North London derby between Arsenal and Spurs, like the Real v Atletico Madrid clash, doesn't make the top 50.

Liverpool v Manchester United ranks top of their LOCAL DERBIES, while predictably El Clasico tops the list of national rivalries.

Here's their list... see what you think.


City Derbies

1 Fenerbahce - Galatasaray                             9.4
2 Boca Juniors - River Plate                             9.3
3 Celtic FC - Rangers FC                                9.1
4 Olympiakos Piraeus - Panathinaikos              8.6
AS Roma - Lazio Roma                               8.5
6 Flamengo - Fluminense                                  8.5
7 Red Star Belgrade - Partizan Belgrade           8.5
8 Al Ahly - Zamalek                                         8.4
Penarol - Nacional Montevideo                    8.3
10 Sevilla FC - Betis Sevilla                             8.2
11 Barcelona SC - Emelec                                 8
12 Benfica - Sporting Lisbon                              8
13 CSKA Sofia - Levski Sofia                           8
14 Genoa - Sampdoria                                       8
15   Gremio - Internacional                                 8
16 Independiente - Racing Club                          8
17  Olimpia - Cerro Porteno                               8
18  Palmeiras - Corinthians                                 8
19 Universidad de Chile - Colo Colo                  8
20 AC Milan - Inter Milan                                7.8
21 Aris Saloniki - PAOK Saloniki                     7.8
22 Aston Villa - Birmingham City                      7.8
23 Bolivar - The Strongest                                7.8
24 Esteghlal - Perspolis                                     7.8
25 Vasco da Gama - Flamengo                         7.8
26 Wydad - Raja                                              7.8
27 Zeljeznicar - FK Sarajevo                            7.8
28 Dinamo Bucharest - Steaua Bucharest          7.7
29 East Bengal - Mohun Bagan                         7.7
30 Orlando Pirates - Kaizer Chiefs               7.7
31 Rosario Central - Newell's Old Boys            7.7
32 Sao Paulo - Palmeiras                                  7.7
33 Atletico Mineiro - Cruzeiro                           7.6
34 Besiktas JK - Fenerbahce                            7.6
35 Alianza Lima - Universitario                          7.5
36 Fluminense - Botafogo                                  7.5
37 Galatasaray - Besiktas JK                            7.5
38 Panathinaikos - AEK Athens                        7.5
39 Velez Mostar - Zrinjski Mostar                   7.5
40 Atletico Paranaense - Coritiba                    7.4
41 Ferencvaros - Ujpest                      7.4
42 Gimnasia - Estudiantes                  7.4
43 Hearts - Hibernian                           7.4
44 Manchester United - Manchester City                   7.4
45 Universidad Catolica - Universidad de Chile                          7.4
46 AEK Athens - Olympiakos Piraeus                             7.3
47 Boavista - Porto                                7.3
48 Club Africain - Esperance                              7.3
49 Everton - Liverpool FC                    7.3
50 San Lorenzo - Huracan                   7.3
51 Wisla Krakow - Cracovia Krakow                                7.3
52 Arsenal - Tottenham Hotspur                     7.2
53 Atletico Nacional - Independiente Medellin                         7.2
54 America de Cali - Deportivo Cali                                 7.1
55 Karsiyaka - Goztepe                        7.1
56 LKS Lodz - Widzew Lodz                                7.1
57 Santa Fe - Millonarios                     7.1
58 AIK Stockholm - Djurgardens IF                                 7
59 Atletico Madrid - Real Madrid                     7
60 Bahia - Vitoria                    7
61 Brentford FC - QPR                          7
62 Djurgardens IF - Hammarby                        7
63 Maccabi Haifa - Hapoel Haifa                       7
64 Saprissa - Alajuelense                    7
65 Spartak Moscow - CSKA Moscow                              7
66 West Ham United - Millwall FC                   7
67 Apoel Nicosia - Omonia Nicosia                  6.8
68 Sheffield Wednesday - Sheffield United                               6.8
69 Lyn - Valerenga                                 6.7
70 Dundee FC - Dundee United                       6.6

                
  Local Derbies

1 Liverpool FC - Manchester United                            8
2 Saint Etienne - Olympique Lyon                                 8
3 Sunderland AFC - Newcastle United                        8
4 Schalke 04 - Borussia Dortmund                             7.8
5 Ipswich Town - Norwich City                                 7.7
6 Southampton - Portsmouth                                      7.6
7 Cardiff City - Swansea City                                     7.5
8 Deportivo de la Coruna - Celta de Vigo                   7.4
9 West Bromwich Albion - Aston Villa                        7.1
19 Wolves - West Bromwich Albion                           7.1
20 Blackburn Rovers - Burnley                                    7

               
Rivalries

Barcelona - Real Madrid                                8.9
2 Hajduk Split - Dinamo Zagreb                         8.6
3 Ajax - Feyenoord                                            8.4
4 Paris St. Germain - Olympique Marseille          8.3
Chivas - America                                            8
6 Arsenal - Manchester United                            7.8
7 Trabzonspor - Fenerbahce                               7.6
8 Porto - Benfica                                                7.5
9 Panathinaikos - PAOK Saloniki                       7.3
10 PAOK Saloniki - Olympiakos Piraeus           7.3
11 PSV Eindhoven - Ajax                                  7.3
12 Anderlecht - Club Brugge                             7.2
13 Feyenoord - PSV Eindhoven                        7
14 PAOK Saloniki - AEK Athens                     7
15 Sporting Lisbon - Porto                                7
16 Olimpija Ljubljana - NK Maribor                 6.5
17 Sydney FC - Melbourne Victory                 6
18 Kapaz - Neftci                                           5.8








































































Tuesday, March 5, 2013

The Bafana masterplan for 2018: This is the word of Gord


The way ahead: Igesund and squad
No point in being clever here. I'm just going to quote Gordon Igesund when it comes to the "2018 South African Masterplan" he unveiled to the SAFA technical committee on Friday morning.


Everybody I've spoken to said it was one of the most impressive presentations they'd seen in the game. A real, long-term plan for Bafana Bafana. Farouk Khan, a man who knows a thing or two about football development, described it as “something I’ve never seen from a Bafana manager before.”


We had a long talk with Gordon on SportsTalk on Talk Radio 702 and Cape Talk 567 with Udo Carelse. There's no point in me adding my comments.



IT'S THE WORD OF GORD


"It’s actually very simple, I had to put through a proposal suggesting the right way for us to go. 


“We had five players in our squad who played for the South African youth teams. The great football teams in the world have 22 of their 23 who progress through the Under 19 and Under 21s.


“This is the way we have to go with our squad. Our players have to be trained and programmed to play the system the way the national team plays.


“We have to do much, much better with our development. The Under 17 and Under 19 coaches have to buy in to our senior system.


“We’ve been through difficult times. We’re trying to get a quick fix sometimes, we’ve had so many national team coaches.


WINGLESS WONDERS

“The World Cup coach we had didn’t have wingers. The next coach wanted to play another way. The style, the system is changing too much. We have to buy in to a system we can identify with. For the next six years we have to stick to a certain style. The coaches must teach our players to use that system, that style.


“So when you get a player from the Under 23 team to the national team, he will fit in completely.


“Development can’t be done in one year. It takes 10 years, 15 years. The kids don’t have enough time to adapt. We really have to apply our minds, make sure we stick to this philosophy for the next ten years.


CONTRACT KILLER

“A week ago I was supposed to sit down with the president of SAFA but I ended up in hospital with an appendix. I’m not in a big rush to sign a new contract. I’m getting huge support, the new contract will happen.


“Indications are that it is exactly what they want. It will be no problem.


“I want a team that squeezes the opposition. We want to play 4-3-3 with three strikers, one very attacking midfielder. Against Mali we were outstanding, and Morocco. We had more possession, more attacks than any other team in the competition.


“We have great youngsters coming through, Mahlangu, Furman, Serero. This is not something new, Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates play like this. Possess it, move forward quickly, don’t give it away. The blueprint is out there, as time goes on, people are going to be able to identify South African football.


“This is not a Gordon Igesund brand of football. This is South African. Like you can identify Dutch or German football.  We’ve got to hone it, play attractive football.


“We have to identify players too. We had a bit of a problem. Too many similar players up front. We have to develop it in our Under 17 team, show a striker how to play with his back to goal.


“We were the highest scoring team in our group at AFCON, not bad for a team that couldn’t score goals before the competition.


“You can’t expect to score goals if you only push forward three or four times in a game. For a team that hadn’t won in years in the AFCON, we changed things. That’s where we want to get to.


 IS IT IN THE GENES?

“High pressure. Sprinting. Stop, start. But we weren’t fit enough. I realised that was our problem. Our players have the fitness to run the Comrades Marathon but not the anaerobic fitness, the stop-and-start ability to keep going.


“That’s not naturally in our make-up. The short stuff. The 10m sprints. We’re not genetically built for that. It’s something we have to learn.


“We’ve been out of world football for far too long. We need to get it right from an early age.


“Our youngsters have to be able to play this way, a pressing game. Against Mali, we started to tire, we weren’t tight… they scored. And they won on penalties.


“We can produce world class players again. Look at our history. In the Confederations Cup, we held Spain. We’ve played the top teams in the world.


“The last 10 years or so, there’ve been so many changes. Too many short term fixes. Whether Gordon Igesund or Joe Soap is in charge, we have to develop our philosophy, work on that.


“In ten years from now, we’ll see a huge difference. Anaerobic training from a young age. Dean Furman and May Mahlangu, both playing in Europe, ran 15 and 16km in a match. Most only do 12km. And they were able to do 50 to 60 sprints, local players could only do 10 or 20 sprints.


“Tactically, we can’t play a squeezing game with our local players. We have to start scientifically get our players to a level of fitness. From an early age.


ON THE SAME PAGE

“Our junior coaches, our Under 17 and Under 21 coaches, we all need a common goal. Spain, Portugal, Germany… their squads, of the 23, each had 22 who had come through Under 17, Under 21. Each trained to play a certain way.


“My squad had 14 players who have never seen a South African youth team.


“We need to have the best coaches in there, people who have played football, know the game, able to work.


“Whether it’s me or somebody else, as head coach, I need to tell all the other coaches how we’re going to do it. For Under 20, for Under 23.


“Then all of a sudden we’re on the same page. This is hugely important.


“I’ve only just unveiled my master plan. I can’t reveal it all. There are a lot of names I’ve mentioned, people I’d like to work with. I know the coaches of want, of course I do. But it’s a bit early to name names.”


And there it is. In tablet form. The word of Gord.

This article appeared as my Neal & Pray column in The New Age this week. You can follow me on twitter at @nealcol, watch me on eTV Sunrise and eNCAnews every Monday - or simply go to www.702.co.za every night of the week, where I produce SportsTalk with Udo Carelse.