Two killed, many hurt in Soweto derby

30 July 2017 - 00:00 By NJABULO NGIDI

Two people died in a stampede outside the venue during the Carling Black Label Champion Cup between Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates yesterday. There were also multiple injuries which led to all gates being opened to control the situation as the match continued with many in the stadium unaware of what was happening outside.
The MC didn't mention the tragic news, and if he tried he would have been inaudible in a loud atmosphere with a sold-out crowd.
Member of the Mayoral Committee for Public Safety, councillor Michael Sun, confirmed the news on Twitter during the match, revealing that all the gates were opened after the stampede and the ambulance capacity was increased.
This wasn't the first time fans lost their lives during a Soweto Derby. On April 11 2001 43 people died during a stampede at Ellis Park and on January 13 1991 42 lives were lost in a friendly between the Soweto giants at Oppenheimer Stadium in Orkney.
In the match Bernard Parker and Gustavo Paez continued to make their case to Steve Komphela that they can solve Chiefs' scoring woes.
They combined well, feeding off the energy of each other. Neither permanently occupied the role of the centre-forward. When Paez was in the box, Parker drifted wide to supply the Venezuelan-born striker and Paez did the same when Parker entered the box. Paez did most of the running, making clever runs to open the Buccaneers' defence. They combined to score the solitary goal with Paez the supplier and Parker the finisher.
Pirates coach Kjell Jonevret was surprisingly jovial for a man who seemingly walked into the guillotine with his hands tied behind his back, unable to defend himself in what could have been his last match in charge of the Buccaneers. Fans selected the starting XI and another served as the "coach". Jonevret invited Chief Nkoko, Pirates' champion coach, to sit on his seat.
There are rumours that Milutin "Micho" Sredojevic could be sitting on that seat in the coming season. Those rumours were further fuelled by Sredojevic parting ways with the Federation of Uganda Football Association hours before this match. Zamalek and Pirates are favourites to land his signature. But the instability of the Egyptian giants under the unpredictable Mortada Mansour could sway Micho to the Buccaneers that he led to a semifinal in the 2006 Caf Champions League.
Pirates' deep-rooted problems still persist and need the management and players to own up and then fix them if they are to pick themselves out of the slump they're in...

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