
SOUTH  AFRICA’S extraordinary 1-0 pre-World Cup triumph over Denmark, ranked nearly 50  places above them in the latest FIFA rankings, has got the football-speaking  world buzzing.
Katlego  Mphela’s solitary goal in the 75th minute didn’t really do his side  justice. The South Africans, ranked a hopeless 83rd, were growing  stronger and stronger as the 40,000 yellow-clad fans were eased gently towards  gleeful hysteria.
It  wasn’t Everton’s player of the year Steven Pienaar who spurred the nation to yet  another pre-World Cup triumph, nor should we focus too heavily on the other  Premier League stars, Kagiso Dikgacoi of Fulham and Portsmouth’s Aaron Mokoena.  It was the bit part players. The ones we English hacks have never heard  of.
In  goal, Itumeleng Khune was faultless apart from a  single cross. His late save denied the Danes an undeserved leveller and his  distribution is both fast and innovative. At centre-back, Bongani Khumalo continues to impress next to Mokoena,  winning his 101st cap, and out wide , Teko Modise  deserves to be made a post-World Cup millionaire by the Premier League  scouts.
In  midfield, man of the match Reneilwe  Letsholonyane and his  Kaizer Chiefs team-mate Siphiwe Tshabalala were monumental. From the first  minute to the last, the dreadlocked midfielders were prompting, passing,  perspiring in the Highveld winter sun. And the great Danes, ranked 36 in the  world, simply couldn’t cope. And among their number were Liverpool’s Daniel Agger, Christian Poulsen of Juventus  and veteran Feyenoord front-man Jon Dahl  Tomasson
Sure,  they’ll have Nicklas Bendtner fit to play in their opening Group E clash against  Holland Soccer City on June 14.
But  even the towering 6ft 4in Arsenal striker would have struggled for a glimpse of  goal on the day South Africa came of age on the international stage – at just  the right time, given their tough Group A opening game against Mexico on June  11.
The  key is not difficult to discern. Here it is, remember it well. Back in 2002,  Dutch genius Guus Hiddink decided his South Korean side, mostly locally based,  could only thrive if they were supremely fit. A bunch of journeymen who can run  forever will punch way above their weight. Hiddink was so nearly proven right.  The Taeguk Warriors reached the semi-finals on home soil and the nation rejoiced  at their unexpected success.
For  Hiddink, read Bafana Bafana’s Brazilian World Cup-winning coach Carlos Alberto  Parreira. Since he returned to the hottest seat in football last November, South  Africa have gone 12 matches unbeaten, leaving teams like Bulgaria and Colombia  in their growing wake.
Three  months ago, Parreira embarked on a camp to Brazil, promising to up the fitness  levels. Unbeaten in their coach’s back yard, the uncelebrated members of the  South Africa squad went off to Germany for further preparation. And then they  returned to be joined by the stars who earn their keep  overseas.
Some  of the locally-based players have lost 2st in the process. They are, to coin a  British phrase, “as fit as a robber’s dog”, capable of running forever, at  altitude. It’s no wonder there was no room in the final 23 for West Ham’s  less-than-svelte Benni McCarthy.
Perhaps  Parreira should consider an Olympic role next. These guys look capable of  serious middle-distance mayhem, Fulham’s Dikgacoi looked like a lumbering  heavyweight by comparison.
When  Mphela, latching on to a through ball from the eagle-eyed Letsholonyane, slipped his Danish defender to fire into  the far corner with a quarter of an hour to play, it was a victory for blood,  sweat and tears, not to mention a growing confidence, an ability to keep  possession and an increasingly deft touch on the ball from players who ply their  trade in a very average South African Premier League.
Parreira  won the little golden trophy which means so much in 1994, surely he can’t do it  again? He grins: “I am very proud. We want to keep making South Africa proud of  us. I am not saying Bafana are going to win the World Cup but we need to get as  far as possible. Once we get to the second round when it becomes a knockout  tournament, anything can happen and I am happy to take my chances  then.
 “The players have shown fantastic commitment  by buying into playing the ball on the ground, keeping possession and most of  all getting 100% match fit. We are fighting fit and that has been the  difference. Fitness played a key role in the training camps and we are getting  the benefit of that. We are much more organised now.”
A  seriously pleased Parreira, who has worked his men for up to six hours a day  over the last three months, added: “We are now ready for the World Cup. It is  not going to be an easy tournament for us because we are in a very tough Group A  with Mexico, Uruguay and France.
“But  this win and the way the players have played in all the recent warm-up matches  has shown the world we can look forward with confidence to playing  Mexico.”
Amid  a chaotic press conference next to the perfect Atteridgeville pitch, Parreira  told us in several different languages: “This was a tough, tough game for us. We  played against a highly experienced and professional team. Make no mistake the  Danes were good but we were a little better on the day and this rounds off my  World Cup preparation beautifully.”
Captain  Mokoena said: “Denmark  are credible  opposition. It was a brilliant win for us, they fought for every inch. The fact  we have now gone 12 games unbeaten under this coach has give us massive  motivation for the opening World Cup game against Mexico. We are good to  go.”
They  sure are. The World Cup hosts nearly doubled their lead in the 90th  minute, but Surprise Moriri's shot was deflected for a corner. A second goal  would have been about right after a dominant display for short-passing  possession football. And most spectacular of all, the way the South Africans  tracked back when they lost possession.
Elsewhere,  on the day Nigeria’s John Obi Mikel was ruled out of the World Cup, Holland’s  Aarjen Robben suffered a suspected hamstring strain in the 6-1 win over Hungary  while Australia were humbled 3-1 by the USA at Ruimsig near  Johannesburg.
But  forget all that. Look at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAZhxAVIwLU and see what  kind of day I had. Just being there was a joy. From the smiling policemen before  the match to the welcome at the local shebeen afterwards, you could not ask for  a better atmosphere.
As I said to the British audience on  talkSPORT radio afterwards, if you weren’t planning to come out, reconsider. I  got my wife a flight two days ago, for £800 on South African Airways. The hotels  still have rooms. There are still tickets and if you miss out on those, free  fanzones in every city. This will be a fascinating, unpredictable World Cup,  colourful and passionate. Don’t miss it. Please don’t let it pass you  by.
Neal Collins is in South Africa  promoting his first novel, A GAME APART, which is currently the 25th  best-selling African book on Amazon. For more details, see www.nealcollins.co.uk
 
 
"It wasn’t Everton’s player of the year Kevin Pienaar... It was the bit part players. The ones we English hacks have never heard of."
ReplyDeleteFAIL.
We shall see. South Africa looked a compact, hard-working, organised side again today and Carlos Alberto Parreira's optimism is infectious. They're fit. Very fit. It could be the key.
ReplyDeleteGreat post again Neal. Looked like a great game on the telly - would have loved to have been there.
ReplyDeleteI think Anons' FAIL is a pointer to the "Kevin" Pienaar reference - I think you might have your Kevin Pietersen mixed up with your Steven Pienaar. A touch too much at the shebeen perhaps?
Sorry, but I haven't seen anything to change my mind that Bafana will not make it through the group stage. Not without a Kenyan referee anyway. Not being a pessimist. Just think the locals are over-hyping Bafana's chances.
ReplyDeleteThese friendlies are totally pointless. Why are England playing Platinum Stars ? What can Capello learn that he doesn't already know ?
Ah come on, home crowd, vuvuzelas, super-fit... they've got every chance in what will be a very unpredictable world cup... friendlies are pointless in many ways, that's why England are playing a local club side before USA on Saturday. Keeps the pressure off, the hype down (as much as possible)... on my way there now, it's a long drive... going to keep an eye on their goalkeeper. Apparently he's special... nothing else to be learned, just a run through.
ReplyDeleteDon't get me wrong Neal, I desperately hope Bafana get through the group stage to keep the momentum going. I just think the media are raising the home fans' hopes too high. For heavens sake we have even had headlines about Stevie P ....."the Westbury wonder boy".
ReplyDeleteWe complain about the overseas media blowing things out of all proportion, but the locals are giving them a run for their money.