SOUTH Africa head coach Hugo Broos claimed that Mohamed Salah admitted his surprise at receiving the penalty from which he scored the winning goal in Egypt’s 1-0 triumph on Friday in Agadir.
Salah’s panenka came off the back of a foul he won off Khuliso Mudau. The Bafana right-back’s hand caught Salah’s face, but contact was minimal.
“First half, Egypt was the better team. Second half, we were the better team. The game was decided by two decisions — two decisions that were not right,” Broos told the media after the match.
“The first one was ridiculous. Even Mo Salah said to me after the game that he was surprised that that was a penalty.”
The other decision Broos aimed at from referee Pacifique Ndabihawenimana and his officiating team was the denial of Bafana’s penalty shout for handball against Yasser Ibrahim
Egypt’s forward Mohamed Salah is fouled by South Africa’s defender Khuliso Mudau and a penalty is given, seeing Egypt win the Afcon match 1-0.
The centre-back had blocked a Teboho Mokoena shot with his arm inside the box in the dying minutes of the game. However, despite a VAR check, the penalty was not awarded due to Ibrahim’s arm having been adjudged to have been in a natural position to support his body despite being extended.
“The second was a real penalty, because the arm was extended from the body and the ball hit his arm — but then suddenly, there is a rule of the supporting arm. What is the supporting arm?” Broos retorted.
“There are so many rules now (for determining) if it’s a penalty or not a penalty that people don’t know anymore what to decide.”
Bafana played the second half with a numerical advantage due to a red card to Mohamed Hany after he picked up a second yellow for a foul on Teboho Mokoena right before half-time.
They had 62% of the possession and 16 shots to Egypt’s seven throughout the course of the game. However, they were unable to break a stubborn Pharaohs defence down.
Egypt booked their place in the last 16 ahead of their Monday clash with Angola in Agadir. Bafana Bafana will have to wrap theirs up in Marrakesh on the same day against neighbours Zimbabwe.
Bafana Bafana lost 1-0 to 10-man Egypt in Agadir on Friday, with Mohamed Salah scoring a contentious penalty, but new Chicago Fire FC centre-back Mbekezeli Mbokazi can hold his head up high after a strong, mature performance.
Salah started on Egypt’s right flank, where Bafana fielded an offensive-minded left-back, Aubrey Modiba. At left centre-back, Mbokazi was always going to have to cover ground to ensure South Africa were not left exposed.
The opening minutes saw Salah frequently drifting inside and testing the tactical wherewithal of 20-year-old Mbokazi, who recently joined Chicago Fire from Orlando Pirates. ‘TLB’ as he is affectionately known in South Africa, stood his ground.
In the 11th minute, Salah was at the centre of two opportunities in a matter of seconds. The first saw him drop into midfield to create space, run at the defence, and look to slip in Mohamed Hamdy. However, a superb challenge from Bafana Bafana right-back Khuliso Mudau inside the box snuffed out the danger.
Moments later, Mohamed Hany found space on Modiba’s side and his ball flashed inches in front of Salah, across the face of goal and away from danger.
Bafana Bafana were under siege, but their defence held firm and Mbokazi was the anchor on and off the ball.
He made a superb challenge in the penalty area in the 24th minute to snuff out another attack and Bafana would go through him time and time again for either a pinpoint long ball or a perfectly-timed pass to a nearer teammate in space.
Around the half-hour mark, after Bafana had regained a degree of control, Egypt attempted to catch Mbokazi out of position via a counter-attack. However, he was on the scene in a flash — marshalling Zizo out of play and even winning a throw-in.
Bafana controlled the game until the last few minutes before half-time — when Mudau’s hand in the face of Salah in the penalty area was contentiously viewed as sufficient contact for a spot-kick — which Salah dispatched coolly via a panenka.
In stoppage time, Mohamed Hany was sent off for a foul on Teboho Mokoena — instantly turning the game on its head.
Egypt had some success with counter-attacks, but Mbokazi was invariably the defender most adept at snuffing them out — such as in the 75th minute, when he beat Salah to the ball.
Salah’s block from a Lyle Foster effort 10 minutes later led to a counter-attacking opportunity for Egypt, but again, Mbokazi was on hand to win the ball from Ashour.
Not only did Mbokazi barely put a foot wrong all game, but his brilliance ensured Modiba and right centre-back Siyabonga Ngezana had far easier jobs protecting their own channels than they would have without his presence next to them.
Mbokazi has played against quality players on international duty before – notably Ademola Lookman, in Bafana Bafana’s 1-1 draw with Nigeria in September.
However, matching up directly against Salah and Marmoush during the same Afcon game was a challenge beyond anything Mbokazi had faced in the year since he broke into the first team at Orlando Pirates.
After weeks of being in the headlines over Hugo Broos’ ill-judged comments over his move to Chicago Fire and late arrival to pre-Afcon camp, Mbokazi did not show the faintest sign of feeling the pressure.
South Africa has produced many talented centre-backs over the years. Lucas Radebe exceeded all expectations, but others such as former Tottenham defender OJ Mabizela failed to deliver on their promise.
If Broos was right about one thing, it is that if Mbokazi does not make the very top of the game with the prodigious talent he has, it would be a crying shame. —ESPN




