Posted in News on Oct 09, 2009.
Chairman, Kaizer Motaung announced last week the appointment of Bheki Shongwe as the
new Managing Director of the Club. Shongwe who has 30 years of corporate experience
working for different companies in different responsibilities, a self confessed Manchester
United fan outside the three clubs that are dear to him, an enthusiastic die hard
supporter of Kaizer Chiefs from early 70s took time from his busy schedule to speak to
Media Relations Officer, Luthando Zibeko for kaizerchiefs.com
First of all, thank you for your time, Mr. Shongwe. On Tuesday you had an
opportunity to address the players for the first time since your appointment. What was
your message to them?
Luthando, it was not an address, it was just a meet and greet session and I of course
expressed my satisfaction with the way they welcomed me by beating Ajax Cape Town. I have
of course watched them on many occasions from the grandstands but it was for the first
time to have a closer encounter with the players and the Technical Team in particular the
younger players who have not featured in our games yet this season.
I am very impressed with the youthfulness of the Club and I am convinced that we are on
the right track. Once again it was a pleasure to meet and shake hands not only with the
players but the Technical Team as well. (Remember I am still a supporter like all other
supporters) I have no doubt that the team is in good hands in Vladimir Vermezovic and the
rest of the Technical Team.
There are huge expectations on you to change things around both on and off the
field…
Luthando, It would be unfair of people to expect me to change things particularly on
the field of play because we have a capable and competent team of people who are looking
after the team.
The Chairman for one whom himself has played the game and guided the team for over
nearly 40 years is still an integral part of the tactical brains trust of the Technical
Team. We are really privileged to be in this situation.
I know the coach is relatively new to the club and the squad also has a number of young
players and I have got no doubt that it won’t be long that we begin to see and enjoy
the type football associated with Kaizer Chiefs.
Looking at the business side of the organisation, I have detected levels of energy,
enthusiasm and passion for the Club from all staff that I can say I am positive that
Kaizer Chiefs as an organization has a lot of good thing written in front of it. The
administration of the organization wants to ensure that they keep the dream alive of a
Kaizer Chiefs brand without equal. In golfing terms, I understand they say “You
should imagine the ball going inside the whole even before you hit your swing”. For
now, I know that for now we are doing right things we just need to get the timing right.
We are visualizing the ‘ball in the net” all the time. (to paraphrase from
golfers)
I understand that you have also played football in your youth…
Yes Luthando! I played football for number of years and retired in 1986. During our
time, football was played for love and to impress girls than for money and wealth
(laughing).
I started playing football like all the kids in rural areas we would take any old cloth
wrap, tighten it up and find a space to play. We would of course used to get into trouble
for prioritizing football ahead of making sure that the cattle graze in greener pastures,
as parents would have instructed us.
I started my professional playing career started with Manzini Wanderers F.C. , a team I
still love and support to this day. It is the same club that William Shongwe played for
before joining Kaizer Chiefs. In fact William and I played in the same team. In 1983 I had
an opportunity to live and study in Australia where I completed my MBA in Strategy and
Finance. Thereto I found myself playing for the University of Adelaide and in the league
for a team called Tube Makers F.C.
I also had a playing stint in Botswana when I studied there where I played for Gaborone
United F.C. between 1976 and 1978. Zero “My Hero” Johnson a founder member of
the Kaizer XI and later Kaizer Chiefs was our Coach. I learnt a lot of football from
“ZZ” as we used to call him those days and I was very fond of him as a brother
figure even outside the game.
You say for your studies have always been a priority for you…
Luthando, The culture of studying was instilled in me at a very young age by my
grandmother. I was never convinced that I would make a career out of playing football. I
knew that there was lot of things that could happen to a player like injuries, loss of
form, and so on. It is therefore all the studying that I had to do that has helped my
career to date. On your arrival you spoke passionately about the Supporters Club…
Yes of course Luthando, I have been associated with leadership at supporters’ club
level from a very young age. After retiring in 1986 I was elected as Chairperson of the
Supporters Club of Manzini Wanderers. I have always believed that a good supporters club
network underpins a good football brand. It is for this reason therefore I look forward
interacting with all our supporters’ branches to workshop ideas with them on how we
can strengthen the brand. We need to also think about how supporters club network can
assume a pivotal role in community development and poverty alleviation. I know that the
club has done a lot on this but I am convinced there is a lot of ground to be covered
still.
How and when did you make connection a with Kaizer Chiefs?
I have been a supporter of Kaizer Chiefs since 1973! The hippie life style (, Afros,
bell-bottoms) of the 70s and love of all things good was the reason I chose Kaizer Chiefs
as the club to support. It also connected with my own value system as a young person at
that time.
I am convinced, as I was then that I made the right choice for life. Chiefs was about
style and breath of fresh air in South African football and continues to be a torch bearer
in this regard.
So you are a product of the brand?
Yes indeed Sir! The Kaizer Chiefs brand was only three years old when I started
following the Club. I have grown with this brand and I continue to grow with it. I feel
privileged that I have been asked to contribute at this level of responsibility. I know in
my heart that I want to give the best I can, because for Kaizer Chiefs success is not
everything but the only thing!
A new chapter opened for you in 1999. Tell us about that…
In 1999 Primedia Ltd bought an equity interest in Kaizer Chiefs and as a Group Strategy
Director at Primedia at that time and having been very involved with the acquisition
process I was appointed to represent Primedia at the Club’s Board. I was to stay on
as a Director even after my resignation as an employee at Primedia at the request of Mr.
William Kirsh and Mr. Motaung. . I want to thank Mr. Kirsh and Mr. Motaung for affording
me an opportunity to serve in the Board. I have learnt and grown a lot in football
administration terms since then.
It was in August (2009) that I had a lunch with Mr. Motaung where he rearticulated his
vision and mission for the Club pointing out that the time had come for him to share the
burden of running the Club with people who had the love for the Club. He told me he wanted
to separate the role of Executive Chairman and Managing Director a post which he had held
for more than two decades and that for the latter he needed to find somebody who
understood football in the country, Kaizer Chiefs as a club, appreciated the role played
by the Motaung Family in developing the Club for almost 40 years. As I was about to
suggest I could help him to find a candidate, he immediately said, “for that role I
thought you’d be best suited”. This punched the air out of my ‘sail’.
I feel supremely privileged and honoured that Mr. Motaung and the other shareholders
have found me worthy of this task. The Chairman, Mr. Motaung is the giant of South African
and continental football and I will be standing on his shoulders to see far as we take
this brand beyond 40.
What do you see as your immediate challenge?
Luthando, I see as my immediate challenge the identification together with the
Chairman of the opportunities for consolidation and growth of the brand in the rest of the
continent and internationally. I do believe we need to identify new revenue opportunities
for the Club to ensure its sustainability through continuous acquisition and development
of both playing and administrative talent.
So what do you do on your spare time?
I do not think I am going to get much spare time now as I have a 24/7 job (smiling). I
also serve on various Boards and I will be working to make sure that I still have time for
my family. I am a very proud and committed family person and God has been good to have
blessed me with a wonderful family. Should there be a bit of spare time left I want to
continue playing a bit of squash, walk and exercise and I want to learn how to play golf
as I am told it will help me in terms of discipline, mental strength and imagination.
You also come across as an ardent reader…
Luthando, I am a selective reader, a boring technoreader! I read mostly leadership,
organizational change, strategy and finance books. In between all of that I do take a huge
doze of music. I love and collect Jazz and Classical music but I love music in general
Mr. Bheki Shongwe thanks once again for your time, what will be your closing
remarks…
Luthando, I believe and I know that God has been good to me. I have had a life that has
been enriched and continues to be enriched by many people of all walks of life, supreme in
that has been my wife that I have known for the past 26 years. I thank her for growing me
up, to be the man I am today. I believe this is her hard work that has produced in me a
man, a leader, common servant and that is manifesting itself in appointments of honour
like the one I have received from Mr. Motaung.