Chiefs let Pirates off the hook

Ben Motshwari of Kaizer Chiefs, right, and Teenage Hadebe of Orlando Pirates jostle for possession in their Absa Premiership soccer match at the FNB Stadium in Johannesburg on Saturday
Ben Motshwari of Kaizer Chiefs, right, and Teenage Hadebe of Orlando Pirates jostle for possession in their Absa Premiership soccer match at the FNB Stadium in Johannesburg on Saturday
Image: Lefty Shivambu

The 166th Soweto derby on Saturday was brutally fought out at a pace that kept a capacity crowd on the edge of their seats‚ as rivals Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates shared the spoils 1-1.

Ultimately, it seemed the fairest result.

Some 87‚000 supporters braved a sun-baked FNB Stadium that was hot enough for referee Abongile Tom to call first-half water breaks in the Absa Premiership fixture.

Chiefs controlled much of the game‚ leading to Daniel Cardoso putting them ahead via a 53rd-minute penalty.

Pirates only notably lifted their tempo after conceding‚ and then might have wished they had displayed that level of aggression going forward from the start‚ after Thembinkosi Lorch equalised in the 80th.

Overall‚ though‚ it was another furiously competitive derby‚ played at a breakneck pace‚ if perhaps just lacking the skill and refinement much sentimentalised over from the game’s glorious past.

Chiefs might have felt they edged the chances‚ and could have ended an 11-match win-less derby streak. But Pirates certainly were not letting Amakhosi do that with any degree of comfort.

There seemed questions over Chiefs coach Ernst Middendorp’s starting lineup.

Promoted youngster Happy Mashiane’s third start was adventurous‚ if risky.

Could Bernard Parker’s ageing legs make an impact at right wing? Could George Maluleka provide a physical presence in defensive midfield‚ with Willard Katsande relegated to the bench?

Most of those questions were answered in the affirmative‚ and Middendorp’s ability to keep opposition coaches guessing has been a feature of his second tenure at Chiefs.

It probably played a role in him remaining unbeaten in derbies going back to his first spell at Naturena.

Pirates coach Milutin Sredojevic refreshingly made one change from his previous six‚ five and four in Bucs’ last three games – Happy Jele returning from flu for Marshall Munetsi at centreback.

Bucs looked the more dangerous XI on paper.

Daniel Akpeyi debuted in goal for Chiefs‚ following the woes of Virgil Vries standing in for injured Itumeleng Khune.

The Nigeria international was the less active of the two goalkeepers‚ Wayne Sandilands being called into play far more often for Pirates.

Bucs just seemed to freeze for the first hour. They only pushed forward with confidence after Chiefs had scored.

The match got off to a cracking start‚ but faded into an all-too familiar derby midfield brawl as the first half wore on.

A string of chances came in an end-to-end opening 15 minutes – though more in the direction of the goal in front of the northern stand that Chiefs were attacking.

Leonardo Castro’s feed to Khama Billiat was straight to the feet of Alfred Ndengane‚ who hesitated for Billiat to nab the ball back and shoot powerfully at Wayne Sandilands.

Castro headed the resultant corner over the bar.

For Pirates‚ Ben Motshwari was dispossessed on a run into the box‚ Xola Mlambo striking the loose ball well wide.

Philani Zulu replaced Mashiane at the break and Chiefs continued to edge the derby‚ as Parker’s drive goalwards came close.

If anyone could turn Amakhosi’s barren derby run‚ it was Billiat. In the 52nd the Zimbabwean stole the ball off Asavela Mbekile just inside his own half and ran the length of Pirates’ half.

He was fouled by Mbekile‚ chasing back‚ on the left edge of Bucs’ area‚ and Tom pointed to the spot.

Cardoso stepped up and struck low and to the left of Sandilands. Pirates brought on their bullish striker Augustine Mulenga for midfielder Musa Nyatama to try to add physicality and bustle going forward‚ while Mpho Makola also replaced Xola Mlambo.

Bucs then did play with the forward momentum they should have perhaps earlier displayed.

Their pressure and tempo resulted in Hendrick Ekstein being dispossessed to allow Motswari to lay on a beautiful through pass that saw Lorch beat the offside trap‚ round Akpeyi‚ and score.

And at the Makhulong Stadium, Gift Motupa gave Wits an early lead against Highlands Park as they chase their second Premiership title in three seasons, having waited 96 years for the first.

But Namibian Peter Shalulile soon equalised for Highlands, who won the match through a goal from jetheeled Mokete Mogaila on 70 minutes.

The title ambitions of fourth-placed Cape Town City suffered a setback in Durban as they missed a penalty in a 1-0 loss to AmaZulu. -

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