Cape Argus E-dition

Will splashing on new players bring Chiefs results?

MATSHELANE MAMABOLO

WHAT does a team that has just endured a wretched domestic season do to prepare for the next one? Raid the transfer market, of course.

After all, isn’t it that poor seasons are almost always put down to a lack of the requisite playing personnel? Unless of course the finger of blame points directly at the technical head, in which case the poor coach gets sent packing quicker than you can say top eight. Even then, the new incumbent is bound to send management scouring the market as he looks to have the squad made of his type of players. And when that particular club had just come from a season that saw them banished from doing any player trading following an infringement of the transfer rules, a shopping spree is a given.

The question, though, is whether splashing out on new players will deliver the desired result – silverware haul for a club that has recently appeared allergic to success.

Kaizer Chiefs fans, tired of seeing their Mamelodi Sundowns rivals celebrating domestic championship success, are hopeful that the tide will finally turn their way this coming campaign.

What with Amakhosi having just gone all the way to the CAF Champions League albeit only to be humiliated 3-0 by Pitso Mosimane’s Al Ahly.

The continental campaign served to quell the bitter taste of a domestic run that had threatened to see them miss out on the top eight until Arthur Zwane and Dillon Sheppard stepped into the breach following the premature sacking of coach Gavin Hunt and earned the club a spot in the competition.

Former coach Stuart Baxter, a multiple championship winner with the club, has returned to Naturena with the promise of yet another trophy-laden spell.

As if that was not enough to have those “Khosi for Life” fans who swear by the peace sign cocka-hoop as they anticipate the next season, the club has gone and acquired the services of the highly-rated Keagan Dolly. In “luring” the Bafana Bafana midfielder back from France, Chiefs have resurrected that brilliant trio of players who helped make Sundowns the kings of local football about four seasons ago. Dolly, along with Khama Billiat and Leonardo Castro, formed that deadly trio which Mosimane termed the CBD.

Could they do the same at Chiefs? The Amakhosi faithful certainly hope so, although the reality is that those brilliant days of the CBD are seasons behind us. In any case, the trio worked under a coach who plays his game very differently to how Baxter does.

Still, Dolly should contribute in helping Chiefs to a much better season than the previous one.

Chiefs have also signed the industrious Cole Alexander who played under Baxter when they were both in India. The man who has played for numerous clubs in the elite local league and for the national team should do a great job of filling the gap left by veteran Willard Katsande, the Zimbabwean the solitary one to be let go among the senior players whose contracts had expired.

In extending the contracts of Billiat, Bernard Parker, Ramahlwe Mphahlele, Lebogang Manyama and Itumeleng Khune the club went against the grain of what most believed – that Chiefs were due an injection of young fresh blood as the seasoned campaigners no longer had the drive for further success.

SPORT

en-za

2021-07-31T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-31T07:00:00.0000000Z

http://capeargus.pressreader.com/article/281797107034628

African News Agency