Posted in News on Nov 17, 2009.
string Jamaica in their final friendly of the year at a cold Free State Stadium in Bloemfontein on Tuesday night.
The biggest losers were the 20 000 odd supporters who braved
the cold wintery conditions to support their team who turned in a
below average display.
It is now over six hours since Bafana last scored a goal and
that was against minnows Madagascar in a friendly played in
Kimberley in September.
New Bafana head coach Carlos Alberto Parreira goes into the
Festive Season international recess with a major headache -- how to
score goals. And how to instil a sense of urgency into his players.
Urgency was one of the main ingredients Bafana lacked in front of
their enthusiastic Bloemfontein fans.
But at the end of a cold night Bafana's performance was a huge
disappointment giving the quality of their opposition.
Parreira has seven months until the World soccer showpiece kicks
off on South African soil and after Tuesday night's showing
Parreira will have his work cut out to get this bunch of players
anywhere near ready to take on the world's best countries in seven
short months.
Bafana showed plenty of fighting spirit when they drew 0-0
against highly-rated Japan in Port Elizabeth last weekend but
failing to beat a make shift Jamaica shows that Parreira will be
earning all of his R1.6 million per month salary during the next
seven months.
Jamaica were there for the taking in the first half but Bafana
could not capitalise on their visitors' slow back four and sloppy
passing.
Bafana were too casual, kept playing the ball sideways and
backwards and wanted too many touches. Bafana also wanted to
dribble and show off and, as result, they got nowhere in the opening
45 minutes against a limited Jamaican side that looked like they
would be overwhelmed. They did, however, nearly shock their hosts in the 23rd
minute, but Bafana skipper Aaron Mokoena did brilliantly
to rescue the situation when he managed to scoop Dane Richards's shot
off his goalline.
Bafana started off confidently when Siphiwe Tshabalala threaded
the ball to Katlego Mphela whose shot went wide after only two
minutes.
Mphela, the Premier Soccer League and Mamelodi Sundowns' leading
goal scorer should have scored in the tenth minute when he was set
up by Benni McCarthy.
But instead of firing past goalkeeper Dwayne Muller, Mphela
managed to direct the ball from close range straight at the
grateful Jamaican keeper.
It was all Bafana at that stage. Reneilwe Letsholonyane tried a
right wing cross for his Kaizer Chiefs teammate Tshabalala, but the
Bafana left wing failed to connect the ball at the far post in the
22nd minute.
A minute later the Bafana defence went walk
about but the Bafana captain saved the day with a great stop on his
goalline from a Richards shot that was heading for the back of the
net.
At the other end, in the 25th minute Muller pulled off a stunning save from a
powerful 25-metre free kick from McCarthy that had goal written all
over it.
McCarthy, who struggled again as he did in the 0-0 draw against
Japan in Port Elizabeth at the weekend, was wide of the target in
the 35th minute. Unless he gets game time at club level he is not
going to be an asset for the 2010 World Cup.
Jamaica's only other goal-scoring attempt came from a free kick
from Demar Phillips that screamed over the crossbar five minutes
from the break.
Bafana were frustrated again after the break and despite having
territorial advantage had no penetration in front of goals.
Bafana came close to breaking the deadlock when a volley by
Kagisho Dikgacoi flew centimetres over the Jamaican crossbar on 67
minutes.
The match fizzled out after the Fulham midfielder's tremendous
volley and at the end of the night Bafana sent their loyal fans
home disappointed.
For Parreira his first two matches in charge produced more
questions than answers.