Baxter can only survey wreckage after Bafana's disastrous World Cup campaign

12 November 2017 - 16:53
By Marc Strydom
ANGRY: Stuart Baxter
ANGRY: Stuart Baxter

Bafana Bafana’s World Cup campaign was lost in their defeats against Cape Verde‚ which ensured the South Africans went into Friday night’s qualifier against Senegal with a knife at their throats‚ Stuart Baxter has said.

It was clear in the penultimate Group D qualifier at Peter Mokaba Stadium for Russia 2018 that South Africa were the team under pressure.

Senegal‚ with a point needed‚ and aware that they could still gain it in the return game at home in Dakar on Tuesday night‚ cold be as cool as a mountain breeze.

Bafana conceded a nervy opener to Diafra Sakho in the 13th minute‚ then played some scintillating football but could not relax in front of goal‚ as Themba Zwane forced a save and Lebogang Manyama hit the upright.

Then in the 38th minute it was all but over at 2-0 from Thamsanqa Mhize’s desperately unfortunate own goal.

But desperation was the theme for Bafana.

Their crippling back-to-back defeats against Cape Verde in September‚ the rebound 3-1 home win against Burkina Faso last month‚ had left them needing to beat Senegal twice.

Asked where the campaign had been lost‚ Baxter admitted: “No‚ it was Cape Verde.

“You can’t say it certainly‚ but if we only had two points more on the board going into this game‚ there’s much more of a knife at the throat of the other team‚ instead of us.

“And I think that may have been the difference between us relaxing and scoring in a period where we were playing really well‚ or clearing a ball.

“And I think that can be the difference. This was a do-or-die game because of those games [against Cape Verde]. It shouldn’t have been.

“But that’s history. And I said to the players that what I was pleased about is that the way Senegal played traditionally is not our forte [to deal with].

“To play against teams that sit deep and play quick on the break and have good quality front players who can take you on – that’s not the way South Africa like to attack. They like an open game and space to move in.

“And I thought that this is the best that we’ve played against a team that plays deep‚ to pick our way through after the first 15 minutes.

“And I thought that was encouraging. But again‚ this wasn’t the game where we lost the World Cup ticket.”

Senegal have an unassailable 11 points in Group D to qualify for Russia 2018 going into the now meaningless return match against Bafana in Dakar on Tuesday night.