The national first-team coach Hugo Broos passed the responsibility of overseeing the youth players to the more than capable, Helman Mkhalele. The 23-man-squad selected was seen as an opportunity for Mzansi’s up and coming ballers to showcase their talent. So, with the results accomplished in Durban, can the Bafana-faithful be excited about what the future holds for our beloved team?
The Squad Selection
There was what seemed to be an inevitable backlash when the 23-man-squad was announced to defend the title. The media, fans, and even ex-players spoke out against the young squad. Former Orlando Pirates forward Katlego Mashego took a jab at the process when speaking to KickOff saying, “You can select your Cosafa team from the best players in your local league, but now it’s about first division players or players who are not regulars in their teams.”
“I’m sure there are players who are young and play regularly in their clubs. Because whichever way you want to look at it this is still the national team. You can’t have players that still need to be developed in the national team.
“On Wednesday, who are those players that were playing there? Some of them I have never seen or never heard of.
“There are players like Nkosingiphile Ngcobo, Njabulo Blom who are not even in the national team set-up, why don’t they invite those players?”
Ahead of the COSAFA Cup, Broos made it clear to the public that he is not happy with the quality in the PSL, alongside insight into the lack of any form of football for the under-23’s national set up. Coach Makhelele backed his head coach stating that players chosen for the COSAFA tournament are earmarked for the 2024 Olympic Games qualifiers. Furthermore, the 2026 World Cup will see a majority of these players reaching the ripe age required – roughly aged 23-25.
Players who raised their hands
In fairness to critiques out there, not all the players selected raised their hands emphatically but like in any competition there are those who shine. Heading into the tournament, there were names who were always going to be closely watched.
Ethan Brooks was obviously the fan favourite and rightfully so, having been apart of the 2021 winning squad. Boitumelo Radiopane of Orlando Pirates (now on loan at Cape Town Spurs) came into the tournament on the back of a uber successful DStv Diski Challenge campaign with 24 goals, earning the top goalscorer award. Other young talents who aimed to shine are SuperSport United’s Selaelo Rasebotja and Mamelodi Sundowns’ Siyanda Msani aka Marcelo.
Blinded by results when the future is bright
There is no denying professional football is about results, but from time to time, they can blind us to what is being cooked. Our penalty loss to Mozambique was highly disappointing in front of a packed King Zwelithini Stadium, but the side were able to still play a total of three fixtures.
Most of these young players had never played with a crowd like in their first encounter and it could have arguably been the mitigating factor. A rather unchanged side against Madagascar proved they can get the required result with even lower energy levels, and a final against a fairly strong Botswana with a heavily rotated squad didn’t prove all the more difficult.
A fifth-placed finish is nothing to brag about, but the experience gained is everything considering the players heading into the tournament. The future looks bright…
Written by Joshua Gaillard