Sundowns’ Mngqithi says Bafana boss Broos can criticise PSL if he’s winning

29 September 2022 - 16:32 By SITHEMBISO DINDI
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Sundowns coach Manqoba Mngqithi during media open day at Chloorkop on September 29.
Sundowns coach Manqoba Mngqithi during media open day at Chloorkop on September 29.
Image: Lee Warren/Gallo Images

Mamelodi Sundowns coach Manqoba Mngqithi says if Bafana Bafana coach Hugo Broos was winning his bigger matches he would have a right to strong opinion about the standard of the Premier Soccer League (PSL) and local players.

Broos again questioned the standard of SA domestic football after Bafana’s flat 1-0 victory friendly over Botswana at FNB Stadium on Tuesday and went as far as saying some players are unlikely to play for the national team again.

Mngqithi did not dispute Broos's opinion but argued the PSL is not as bad as the national team coach makes it out to be. Downs' coach also suggested sometimes Broos does not pick the best players the PSL has to offer. 

“To be honest, I wouldn’t want to comment much about Hugo Broos because it’s a free country and you can say whatever you want to say,” Mngqithi said on Thursday, as Downs prepared for the first leg of Saturday's MTN8 semifinal against Orlando Pirates at Orlando Stadium.

“But the only thing that is always very important, and it gives you little bit of licence to say whatever you want to say, is if you are winning matches.

“If you are not winning, there will always be question marks. As to whether SA is good enough or not good enough, I’m not sure because we know SA has achieved very good things in the past.

“We’ve had our national team qualifying for the Olympics, we’ve had our players doing well for many teams. We have had Sundowns competing fairly well in the continental space and locally.

“We have had a number of teams doing really well such as Cape Town City; Pirates has done exceptionally well.”

The Sundowns coach has suggested that Broos, who sometimes has been criticised for his selection process, may be selecting the wrong players.

“I believe there’s a very big pool of players you can choose from,” Mngqithi said.

“But if you are choosing from wherever you are choosing from and you are not winning, and you are saying the team is not good enough, maybe when you are pointing fingers most fingers might be pointing in your direction.”

Mngqithi suggested that while Broos has won some games, the standard of opposition in some of those was questionable.

“If [a coach is] winning matches, we are always willing to listen to any coach and whatever he says because it shows what he is trying to do. But again the calibre of those matches becomes very important.”

Broos has threatened that the next Fifa break in November will be the last time he tries to reach out for a meeting with the PSL coaches and blamed the league for not passing his letter of a meeting request to coaches and clubs.

Mngqithi said Downs' coaches would readily respond to a meeting if Broos simply reached out to them directly.

“It would be nice to also know what he sees because his comments have always been all over. And it’s always nice to talk in person to iron out some of these things,” Mngqithi said.

“We’ve never really said no to Hugo. Or maybe we must phone him to ask for a meeting because he has not called me to ask for a meeting or with the coaches at Sundowns.

“At Sundowns he is free to come here, any day. He can even come to watch training, he is a national team coach. We have got the respect for Hugo Broos, he is the national team coach. That is why we have opened our arms.

“I’ve never had an invitation from the national team coach and he is forever complaining that he has not met the coaches and I would like to know who is stopping the national team coach from meeting the coaches.

“Also by the way, because he does come to the matches he can always come down and after the match if that is what he would like to see.”


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