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Luciah Phahla

Maseru – At Lesotho’s oldest and most successful club, changes in the musical chairs in the coaching department is now an accepted reality. Coaches at Matlama come and go with the regularity of changing socks.

Since 2010, Matlama have had seven permanent coaches with Motlalepula Majoro, Mohale Mokoena, Khotso Mokalanyane, Mahao “Bomba” Matete, Mofihli Makoele, Ntebele Taole and Moses Maliehe all having had a taste of the Pitso Ground hot seat.
These names, by the way, exclude caretaker coaches including in 2011 when Matlama finished the season under a four-man caretaker crew of Matsoai Shokhoe, Lehlohonolo Mokhele, Sello Seholoholo and Nkau Lerotholi.

Unsurprisingly, the results of all this chopping and changing have not been good.
‘Tse Putsoa’ are trophyless in six years and, worryingly, there is growing friction between a disgruntled fanbase and an underperforming team.
It is a situation that requires a strong character and Matlama have turned to Seepheephe “Mochini” Matete to be the latest to steer the ship replacing Maliehe who bolted three weeks ago for the national team, Likuena.

There is lot for Matete to tackle in his 18-month contract
In November, Matlama’s rowdy fans stormed the Setsoto Stadium pitch against Lioli causing the abandonment of a match ‘Tse Putsoa’ were losing 2-1 but still had a chance of salvaging.

It is a moment of madness that has derailed Matlama’s season.
As punishment, ‘Tse Putsoa’ were slapped with a 3-0 loss and docked an additional three points. So, after going into that November 6 tie unbeaten, Matlama have plummeted to seventh place in the league since.

It is no surprise, then, that the first issue Matete touched on when he was officially unveiled on Tuesday is the club’s fans.
An upbeat Matete appealed to the club’s supporters to not only rally behind the team when the season resumes in January but to be on their best behaviour.
“It is an easy job for me, it is not a new job to me, but a coaching job needs various departments working together,” he said.
“The supporters need to prepare themselves and support the team. I heard from the secretary general (Thabo Nkhahle) that we have been docked some points. There is no football (club) without supporters, we need the supporters.”

“I have heard that in some matches the (Matlama) players have been reluctant to go even greet their supporters because they insult them,” Matete lamented.
“It is not nice. Something we have to work on at Matlama is unity, we need the supporters. When we talk about Matlama we talk about unity; there is no team without supporters.”
Perhaps more than most, the former Lesotho caretaker boss understands the influence fans possess.
At Matlama especially, supporters can make or break a team or coach.
In 2010 under “Tata” Taole and with the zealous backing of their fans, Matlama morphed into an inferno which claimed the league and cup double.
Later coaches have not been as lucky, however.

Mokoena and Majoro, for example, both lasted only a month at the club after falling foul of Matlama’s fickle fans.
In some ways, then, Matlama are counting on Matete’s stature at the club which has been forged by successful spells as a player and coach to placate the fans and salvage what is becoming a lost season.

‘Tse Putsoa’ came into the campaign with high hopes after finishing second last season. They started well and were the last team to be defeated this season.
However, over the past five matches Matlama have won just once.
They have dropped 10 points behind league leaders Bantu.
Most worrying, perhaps, has been their recent displays. Two weeks ago against Sky Battalion in their last match of the first round, Matlama were outplayed continuing a run in which they have played poorly more often than not.

For Matete, who is steeped in the club’s glorious past, this is not good enough. He won four league titles as a player from 1975 to 1987 and two as a coach.
He said Matlama should be competing in the international tournaments.
“I have been ‘Letlama’ since I was born. I have been helping Matlama for a long time; I will continue to do so. I have just been given a job that I have done in the past. It’s not a new thing, I coached Matlama from 1987 until 1992,” Matete said.

“From 1987 we were winning (titles and) playing international games. I remember we went to Mozambique, Botswana, and Tanzania. Matlama is a team that should play international games. It’s just that in football you win or you lose, but if you lose you must lose with pride,” he said.
Matete admitted he is looking forward to the off-season next May when he will have time to prepare for the 2017/18 campaign and acquire the players he needs.
For now, however, his goal is to finish amongst the “top teams” and work with the players available.
He vowed Matlama will not be in the position they find themselves now when the season ends.

Matete’s first game in charge will be on January 7 when ‘Tse Putsoa’ host Bantu at Setsoto Stadium.
“There is nothing (new) I am going to do. I am not going to look for new players now,” Matete said when asked about the changes he will make.
“I am just going to show the players the importance of playing for Matlama. I started with them (on Monday). They say it is mental strength towards the game that is most important in modern football,” he added.

“I am not going to teach Phafa (Tšosane) how to pass the ball. I am not going to teach Jane (Thaba-Ntšo) how to head the ball. These are things they already know but they have to know why they are doing it.
“(They have to) put Matlama first, they have to know they are playing for a big team with a history. Football is not only inside the field, they have to be role models outside.”

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Eight teams to contest M350,000 Nedbank 8

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Eight teams will battle it out for M350,000 in total prize money when the Nedbank 8 roars into life this weekend at Bambatha Tšita Sports Arena.

The money is an M100,000 increase on last year’s sponsorship and the benefactors are the top eight teams from the just concluded A-Division league campaign – Mzamane, Kick4Life, Lilemela and Maroala from the north stream and Majantja, Swallows, Members and Qoaling Highlanders from the South.

The Nedbank 8 will start at the quarterfinal stage on Saturday and Sunday where teams from the same stream have been kept apart in the draw, and the knockout competition will climax next weekend with the semi-finals and final.

Nedbank 8 Weekend Fixtures:
Saturday
Maroala vs. Qoaling Highlanders (13:00)
Kick4Life Juventude vs. Swallows (15:00)
Sunday
Mzamane vs. Members FC (13:00)
Lilemela vs. Majantja (15:00)

Speaking at Tuesday’s tournament launch, Nedbank marketing manager Sekonyela Matamane said discussions are ongoing to finalise prize monies for teams and players, but the winning club is expected to walk away with more than the M25,000 that last year’s champions pocketed.

“We have a history that we like, we celebrate it and we protect it,” Matamane said.

“Last year we supported the competition with 250 000, this year when we write (the history of the Nedbank 8), that two (hundred thousand) will be three (hundred thousand). By saying that, it means we have added M100 000 to improve the tournament,” he added.

The financial increase is music to the ears of the teams because the Nedbank 8 gifts them a much-needed financial windfall.

Not only does the money collected help the two teams that have won promotion to the Vodacom Premier League, which are Mzamane and Majantja this year, it goes a long way for the six other sides returning to the A-Division next season.

A-Division Management Committee (ADMACO) chairman Tšeliso Ramatla said that is what makes the Nedbank 8 important to the clubs, because it is a chance for them to make some money to help with team expenses.

“Take this opportunity, show a high level (of performance) because it is not easy to have competitions in the league,” Ramatla said to the eight teams.

“In the elite league (Vodacom Premier League) there is only one competition they play, then we wait for this one. The teams’ management know how difficult it is, they know their expenses for the whole season,” he continued.

Ramatla also urged the teams to understand and follow tournament rules.

He said the 2023/24 has been a difficult one for ADMACO because they had many cases that were caused by teams not being able to interpret laws properly.

Ramatla, who is an executive member of Vodacom Premier League champions Bantu, said he hopes there are repeats in the Nedbank 8.

“This season there were many challenges, teams interpret the law how they want and because they do that we had many cases,” Ramatla said. “Teams do not want to read the laws. I know because I run a team, I am in Bantu’s management.”

“I know you don’t read the laws and when things don’t according to your thinking it brings us cases,” Ramatla continued. “I trust we are done with that and we are getting into this tournament with no complaints.”

Tlalane Phahla

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Moment of truth for Matlama

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It’s crunch time in the Vodacom Premier League this weekend as the top teams collide and by Sunday evening there could be serious implications on the title race.
The game of the weekend is on Sunday when second placed Matlama will face third-placed Bantu at Bambatha Tšita Sports Arena. Earlier in the day, league leaders Lioli battle it out with Linare who are fourth.

Linare’s chances of winning the league are now over, but they would love nothing more than to dash their neighbours’ title hopes just as they dented Matlama’s plans with a goalless draw on Sunday in Maputsoe.

It is a draw that Matlama head coach Halemakale Mahlaha admitted has complicated their title hopes but he insisted the championship is still within their reach. ‘Tse Putsoa’, with 58 points from 26 games, are two points behind leaders Lioli with four games to go.

Mahlaha remains confident because Matlama are yet to play Lioli and the destiny of the title is still in his side’s hands.

Bantu, on the other hand, are four points behind Lioli and will need favours from others to defend their title.

It has certainly not been smooth sailing for James Madidilane since returning to the club two months ago, and the dressing room has allegedly been rocked by infighting with some players unhappy with reported favouritism by the South African tactician.

Despite all the drama, ‘A Matšo Matebele’ would love to defend their title and claim their third championship in the past four seasons.

Beating Matlama is the first step because Bantu would leapfrog them into second position on the log with a victory.

If Bantu win, they will also complete a double over Matlama after their 2-0 triumph in the first round and the Mafeteng giants would claim precious bragging rights over their Maseru rivals.

Speaking to thepost on Wednesday, Matlama coach Mahlaha said he is expecting a tough game between Lesotho’s dominant clubs for almost a decade.

Matlama (with two titles) and Bantu (four titles) are the only teams to have won the premiership since 2017 and Mahlaha said Sunday’s match will be another mammoth clash between the sides as both juggernauts again vie to be crowned kings of Lesotho.

“There is a possibility these two teams could win the league and they are right behind one another and that’s what makes it tough,” Mahlaha said.

“The weekend’s results have impacted us, it has increased pressure to win this game,” he added.

Mahlaha admitted playing after Lioli also adds pressure because if Lioli win on Saturday, it means Matlama have to win at all costs to keep the gap at two points.

“Of course it does (put pressure), but we will work hard and focus on Sunday,” Mahlaha said.

“It is great though because we still have to play Lioli, so we will see. We like having tough games because this is how we test our players.”

Weekend Fixtures:
Saturday
CCX vs. LMPS (LAC)
LDF vs. Naughty Boys (Ratjomose)
Liphakoe vs. Machokha (LCS Ground)
Lioli vs. Linare (TY)
Sunday
LCS vs. Lifofane (LCS Ground)
LU FC vs. Lijabatho (Ratjomose, 14:00)
Matlama vs. Bantu (Bambatha)

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Machokha coach fumes

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Machokha coach Tšepo Mokhele says match officials are destroying football in Lesotho.
A fuming Mokhele said poor officiating cost his side in Sunday’s 1-0 loss to title-chasing Matlama after a second half penalty secured the result at Bambatha Tšita Sports Arena.

The final score had weighty implications on the Vodacom Premier League as it allowed Matlama to remain three points behind Lioli with a game in hand, while on the other hand, the defeat means Machokha are still in danger of being relegated.

Mokhele said Matlama did not deserve to win and were gifted the three points by the referees. Machokha had two loud penalty appeals turned down in the first half before ‘Tse Putsoa’ won the game from the spot in the second stanza.

Mokhele said the defeat leaves his side in a precarious position as they battle to survive in the top-flight with five games to go.

Machokha are in 12th place with 22 points, five points above the relegation zone, and gaining a point against ‘Tse Putsoa’ would have given them a safer cushion in their battle to survive.

Mokhele said the Lesotho Football Association (LEFA) must do something about the officiating in the country because, if things continue as they are, it will destroy football.

“Officials are not only degrading our football, but they are also degrading our players,” Mokhele fumed. “People are paying to come here and watch a very beautiful game yet referees come and make us lose because we cannot fight them, which is very sad,” he added.

Mokhele insisted the result could have gone the other way if Machokha’s “clear” penalty appeals had been awarded.

“We could have won the game but the referees rejected our two clear penalties and I don’t know what Matlama’s penalty was given for, because that was not a penalty,” he said.

Mokhele said a similar thing happened when the sides’ met in the first round when Matlama scraped a 2-1 win.

“We scored first (in the first round match) before Matlama equalized. After Matlama scored the second goal, the game was over and that did not sit well with me,” he said.

Mokhele said what pains him most is that Machokha have a few matches to play in the Vodacom Premiership season and referees are gambling with their future as they did on Sunday.

Mokhele said the favouritism from referees does no favours for Lesotho’s big teams when they enter continental competitions.

“This is why you see people win the league in the country because they are used to being put on top of other people, but when they find fair refereeing (in CAF competitions) and they have to toughen up at the international level, we are always out. It is because of things like this,” he said.

“Let us compete,” Mokhele continued.

“Respect the crowd, the players, (LEFA) presidency and the people who are pouring money into football. Money is being spent each and every day only for our referees to do something like this. We did not deserve to lose that game,” Machokha coach insisted.

Matlama coach Halemakale Mahlaha declined to comment on the awarding of his side’s winning penalty but said his side’s struggles on the day showed that his players were not playing according to the game-plan.

“Our performance might be because of the internal things that happened a day before the game. Maybe the players were mentally distracted by the (9-1 win over) Naughty Boys (in the previous week),” Mahlaha said.

“Winning by that huge margin might have distracted the players but what was important was that we collected three points (against Machokha)”.

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