'We have one man and a dog supporting us,' says Bidvest Wits coach Hunt

20 April 2017 - 14:45 By Mark Gleeson
subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now
Bidvest Wits head coach Gavin Hunt during the Absa Premiership match against Cape Town City at Cape Town Stadium on April 19, 2017 in Cape Town, South Africa.
Bidvest Wits head coach Gavin Hunt during the Absa Premiership match against Cape Town City at Cape Town Stadium on April 19, 2017 in Cape Town, South Africa.
Image: Ashley Vlotman/Gallo Images

Winning their remaining home games is going to be key to taking a first-ever Premier Soccer League title for Bidvest Wits‚ said coach Gavin Hunt after an away point against top placed Cape Town City on Wednesday.

“Home games are key. We need to make sure. It’s going to be tight‚” he said as Wits moved to 45 points and remained second behind City but having played two games less.

“We don’t have the bottom teams to play‚ just the top teams.

"If we had won against City we would have had a nice cushion but what is key is to concentrate on our home games.

“You must remember that when a team like Wits comes away‚ we have one man and a dog supporting us.

  • 'I also envy Kaizer Chiefs'‚ says Sundowns coach Pitso MosimaneWith 44 points and sitting in fourth place and left with eight matches to go‚ Mamelodi Sundowns are well-positioned for a late season assault on the teams above them as their title defence finally starts to take shape. 

"When Kaizer Chiefs are away their fans overwhelm the stadium. That makes them favourites.

“For teams like Wits or SuperSport to win the league‚ people don’t understand‚ we have no support away and are rarely on the back foot.

"That’s a difference. We need an extra five or six points a season than the big‚ well supported teams because they get those from the pressure that their supporters put on the opponents.”

Hunt continued to insist champions Mamelodi Sundowns were still favourites and that Wits were not under any pressure.

  • Baxter admits the league title race is starting to slip away from SuperSportAn exasperated SuperSport United coach Stuart Baxter stopped short of admitting his team may have played itself out of the running for league honours. 

“But we have given ourselves a good platform and we should make sure that at the end of the season we don’t have any regrets.

“I’ve got something in my head that if you win your home games and draw your away games you will win.

"But we have SuperSport‚ Sundowns‚ then Chiefs and Pirates to play. We have the majority of them at home though.”

Wits remain with eight games in the campaign‚ having no more cup obligations.

  • 'Top three is the target,' says Tinkler as he attempts to take pressure off his City chargesCape Town City coach Eric Tinkler does not want to put pressure on his players by entertaining talk of winning the Premier Soccer League title. 

They play SuperSport United‚ Sundowns‚ Orlando Pirates‚ Maritzburg United and Polokwane City at home and have three away matches left – at Highlands Park‚ Free State Stars and Chiefs on the last day of the season on May 27.

Asked if Wits could get some momentum going in a tight programme of their next five matches being played in an 11-day period‚ Hunt added: “There is no momentum with South African teams.

"I think one week we are up and the next down.

"We don’t dominate like Chelsea have‚ or Real Madrid or Barcelona.

  • Sundowns move to within two points off leaders with last gasp win over SuperSport Hlompho Kekana's 83rd minute goal propelled Mamelodi Sundowns to a deserved 1-0 win against SuperSport United and underlined their dominance over their Pretoria rivals. 

"We are too inconsistent. Sundowns were fantastic last season‚ they had that run of 11-12 games but I think teams are largely inconsistent.

"Everybody can beat anybody on any given day.

“ For us‚ we have some tough games no doubt about it‚ but you’ll be surprised the closer you get to the finish line‚ it really becomes squeaky bum time.

"People start making errors and if you find a team‚ like Cape Town City‚ if they start thinking about winning the title‚ that’s where your problem can start‚ I think.

“You have to think about just one game at a time and then see where you end‚” he added.

- TMG Digital/TMG Sport

subscribe Just R20 for the first month. Support independent journalism by subscribing to our digital news package.
Subscribe now