Since then, the Brazilians went on an amazing 16-match ubeaten run in
the league, which included a 15-match winning streak, where they managed to
keep a whopping 12 clean sheets.
Now, we may say the Dstv Premiership is a weak league blah blah blah...
Okay, fair enough, but the very same Sundowns team have done
tremendously well in the Caf Champions League as well, winning four of their
six group stage matches, with two draws, and they qualified for the
quarterfinals on top of their group.
To achieve the type of results and dish out the kind of performances
Downs have given us this season can take a lot out of players, their mental strength
has been tested to the limits, physically they have had to push themselves to
the edge, tactically they have had to apply themselves with military precision,
especially in the CAFCL, yet they are still standing, and going strong.
In light of the above, and the fact that they have won the league with
seven matches to spare, Downs’ head coach, Rulani Mokwena, is justified in
saying that his players deserve more credit than they are given, we might not
be at a point where naming a town after them is part of the conversations, but
credit, that they deserve in abundance.
Mokwena on winning the league, and
why his players deserve more credit:
“It was a bit difficult because we live in such a digital and social
media space and whether you like it or not the players will know,” Mokwena said
as quoted by Times Live.
“So my speech to them before the game was, ‘Congratulations, because you
guys know about it, but now you’ve got [a game]’.
“And really it’s something they need to be congratulated for. And
sometimes in South Africa it’s downplayed, and maybe we are victims of our own
success where people undermine the difficulties of winning the Premier
League.
“The league title is the hardest to win in any country. You’ve got to
play against 15 opponents home and away and the competition lasts eight or nine
months. There’s no other competition any team competes in that lasts as
long.
“Sometimes maybe because of the way it may be perceived, and people
start to think it looks easy, that’s actually the most difficult.
“And tonight’s was maybe a game like that where we had to not be in a
celebratory mood because we’d won the championship, which was a very difficult
championship.
“And maybe people might not think that but it’s so difficult to have the
level of consistency that this group has shown over the number of games we’ve
played — having to win and win and win and win without getting tired is not easy.
“There’s a level of complacency that creeps in. To not allow that and
stay at a good competitive mental level is very difficult. I think not enough
credit is given to this group for that.”
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