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Pita takes women’s league by storm

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MASERU – Likened to Barcelona and Spanish legend Andrés Iniesta because of her similar style of play, Lesotho Defence Force Ladies (LDF) attacking midfielder Mosele Pita is enjoying a stellar career in the Women’s Super League.

With four goals already in five games this season, Pita says her target is to hit double digits for the first time in her career and given her performances so far, it appears only a matter of time.

The last time she came close was in 2019 when she scored nine goals. Pita says she had been goal-shy until this season because of an ankle injury that bothered her in the past, but she is fully healthy and determined to contribute more goals to the team.

Under LDF’s previous coaching team, Pita was also a bit-part player and was shifted to the left wing most of the time where she struggled due to her small physique.

In that position, which often requires speed and tracking back to help defensively, she was often forced to play back passes but that has changed under the new LDF Ladies coach Lengana Nkhethoa who has given her a free role on the pitch.

Nkhethoa says when he watches Pita play, she reminds him of Iniesta, who despite his diminutive physique, was unmarkable during his playing days.

Pita herself would admit she is nowhere near Iniesta but the comparison is flattering. Nkhethoa said when he first got involved with the LDF women’s team, he saw Pita’s talent straight away and his job is just about improving on what she already has.

“I thought she has talent and I just need to see how to improve her, so I gave her a free role,” Nkhethoa explains.

“I told her to hold the ball, don’t play one-touch, I would rather they take (the ball) from you. Pass the ball and support, because you are small, avoid contact and she did that. It took time but, so far, she is doing well,” he says.

“Another one is ‘Maseriti Mohlolo, these are players with talent and all I had to do was to make sure that I nurse and nurture that talent,’’ Nkhethoa adds.

Pita plays in a similar position for the national team as well and Nkhethoa says that he tries by all means to let Pita and her LDF teammates know what they are good at.

He says the players are filled with confidence when they are on the ball and he likes it when his players know their strengths.

“When a player is good at something, as a coach, you have to tell them,” Nkhethoa says.

“(You must tell them) you know how to trap, you know how to shoot, you know this, so that she knows and she is not confused of what to do when the ball gets to her,” Nkhethoa continues.

“She must know that I know how to trap (the ball), if you can shoot then shoot. If you show trust in a player and you let them know they are good, that’s it.”

Pita joined LDF from Sky Battalion in 2017 and has not looked back since. When she is not on the football pitch, she normally spends her time at home watching football and is always trying to improve.

If there is anything new that she comes across, she always wants to try it in training sessions and see if she can add it to her game.

“While I was playing for Sky Battalion my role model was LDF player Palesa Mpeta,” Pita says.

“When I got a chance to join LDF it was my secret that I was coming near my role model and at the sessions I would always make sure I was next to her. At the end of 2018 I got an award for the best player and I was really happy. As time went on, the person I considered my role model was telling me I am hers,” she smiles.

“The difference between playing on the wing and midfield is huge, I was playing on the left wing and I am right footed, every time I had the ball I had to go inside and I made a lot of back passes. I was not myself back then,” Pita says.

Pita says she dreams of reaching the levels her national team captain Boitumelo “Queen” Rabale has reached. Rabale has played in the United States and is now a key player for South African champions Mamelodi Sundowns Ladies.

With Sundowns, Rabale has won multiple league titles and the 2021 CAF Women’s Champions League.

She has become a revelation and she is a role model for other players in the WSL.

Pita is trying to get there slowly.

Last year alongside Rabale and Litšeoane Maloro, Pita was chosen as one of the three players that impressed for Lesotho at the COSAFA Women’s Championship in South Africa.

With more international games and exposure there is no doubt Pita could earn a dream move to South Africa if she continues to impress.

“I want to do better than that, I want to be where Queen is. I like to keep my goals to myself. I don’t only want to be the best, I want to be outstanding,” Pita says.

“I don’t stay at one place on the pitch and I always try to avoid 50-50 situations because I will lose,” she adds.

“I like to have the ball at my feet. I think if I keep working hard and we are getting international games, this is where they see my talent.”

Tlalane Phahla

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ACE Maseru basks in glory

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ACE Maseru were crowned the champions of the Nedbank 8 on Saturday after defeating Quthing LMPS 3-1 at Bambatha Tšita Sports Arena. ACE Maseru, who are headed to the Vodacom Premier League after winning the A Division South Stream, went into the competition as hot favourites.

In the end, their ruthless dispatching of the Quthing LMPS showed why many bet on them in the tournament featuring the top eight teams from this season’s first division campaign.

They are on their way to Premier League next season after their first-ever promotion and they say they have no plans to come back to A Division.
The champions are preparing to face the winners of North Stream Limkokwing University on Sunday in the Nedbank Championship.

They could become the second team after Machokha to win their stream, the top 8 as well as the championship. They have already played Limkokwing in the quarter finals and beat them 2-1, they are now aiming for the double over the North Stream winners.

ACE Maseru were by far the most entertaining team in the competition an in each game showed why they are now a Vodacom Premier League team. It’s not just about winning for them, it’s how they do it.
They like to have the ball, and play expansive style of football. Head coach Mofihli Makoele said they want the ball to touch every blade of the grass and reach every part of the ground.

He said he knew North Stream teams would not make it far in the competition as the South Stream teams are ahead of them. He was not shocked to see that only one Sehenehene reached the semi-finals, while the other three Limkokwing, Lilemela and Mzamane were knocked out in the quarter finals.

Sehenehene went on to finish third and went home with bronze medals. They defeated Likhopo 3-2 on penalties in third place play-off after a 1-1 draw in regulation time. The final was an all-South Stream show piece.

“The football played in the Premier League is different to the one we play here, we have to start preparing and playing against Premier League teams. I am sure you saw even the way they play, they just put the ball in front of them and run, we don’t play like that. We want to hold it get behind them and score,” he said.

Makoele was critical of the football other teams play and said the quality of coaching in the A Division needs to be improved.

“We don’t care about the way we play football here at home, I think it’s just us, Majantja and Likhopo who make sure the ball goes to every part of the ground until it gets to where we want it. Some just kick it, in other words we don’t care to improve football. I think our A Division, LEFA has to work on the coaches there is a problem,” he said
“What happens here at home is that you just play your own game, you don’t care how other teams play but we are saying we are going to play so it doesn’t help us,” he continued.

Makoele made a surprising admission that he has not watched the Premier League teams and therefore had no idea what to expect. He said he has only seen Lesotho Correctional Service (LCS) play once and there was nothing to write home about. However, he said they will be playing the Premier League teams during the preseason to prepare themselves.

Normally in the preseason, as teams are still trying to get back their fitness and testing out new season. Sometimes one may not get a clear picture of what to expect in the new season, especially newly promoted teams. Both ACE Maseru and Limkokwing will take Swallows and Galaxy’s spots in the Premier League, both teams their relegation fate was sealed last week.

“We did not play Premier League teams, we need to learn about them and watch them. I was not watching them I think I have only seen LCS and there was nothing scary but we have to play them and see where to fix and improve,” he said.

Nedbank 8
ACE Maseru (M25 000, gold medals and trophy)
Quthing LMPS (M20 000 and silver medals)
Sehenehene (M15 000 and bronze)
Likhopo M13 000All quarter-finalists will each receive M10 000

Individual awards

Goalkeeper of the Tournament: Rasebetsane Khosholo (ACE Maseru) M2 000
Top Goalscorer of the tournament: Lebohang Chocholo (Mahlaseli) M2000
Player of the Tournament: Rorisang Maine (ACE Maseru) M2000

Nedbank Championship
Sunday (Bambatha)
ACE Maseru vs. LU FC (14:00)

Tlalane Phahla

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Big shake-up for football

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MASERU – The Lesotho Football Association (LEFA) says it plans to repackage local competitions in a bid to jazz up the country’s football.

LEFA says it is going to present cups in a different format because it can help to attract sponsors from the corporate world and the football fraternity.

The new strategy was revealed by the association’s secretary general, Mokhosi Mohapi at a Strategic Framework Session held on Friday at the association’s headquarters, Bambatha Tšita Sports Arena.

The repackaging is one of many goals the country’s football governing body is set to embark on in hopes to improve the local game.

In his presentation, Mohapi said the goal is to transform the current status of the local league and have competitive representatives in CAF club competitions.

Mohapi said LEFA also aims to improve the financial stability of clubs.

“The first objective will be to improve the organisational functionality at management level and have productive responsible football clubs,” Mohapi said.

“(We need to address) our visitors in club management because we have studied and we have seen that, at club level, they are visitors, they use it for other reasons not to make football a viable industry on its own,” he said.

“Football management should be in (a) cordial environment with the mother body (LEFA), the relationship can be much better and, if it is, we will be able to leave each other’s spaces and all be successful. If the national team needs help, it will be helped, and our teams will understand the bigger picture because at the current rate we are having about 90 percent coming from the league,” he continued.

The association is set to clamp down on the number of foreigners that are eligible to start a match in the Vodacom Premier League in order to increase more slots for Basotho. Currently, each top-flight team is allowed to register five foreign players.

Over 50 foreigners play each weekend and occupy key positions that Likuena could benefit from if Basotho were playing instead, LEFA argues.

Mohapi said while the federation does not want to discriminate against foreign players, the influx of foreign players becomes a problem for the national team, Likuena.

“The problem is that the most key positions in the league that can represent Likuena are played by foreigners. Go to big teams – Bantu, Linare, Matlama – if we say: ‘let’s try to replace (Lesotho captain) Basia (Makepe) as a centreback’, whom can we replace him with, because the centrebacks are foreigners. If we try to find a replacement for (Motebang Sera) at centre-forward, (the strikers at big clubs) are foreigners,” he said.

“I am proposing we reduce it to three (foreign players) that start a match. We cannot discriminate against foreigners because they are coming to help us, but we are realising that we are not performing well with the national team, (so) let’s increase the slots for Basotho,” he continued.

LEFA’s eye is not just on the players, the federation has also closed the door on foreign coaches who come to Lesotho to earn the CAF A Licence, only for them to leave. The A Licence is the second highest coaching qualification offered by CAF and it is a must-have requirement for a coach to sit on the bench during CAF competitions.

It is cheaper to acquire the licence in Lesotho as it is heavily subsidised by LEFA. In other countries it is difficult to get a CAF A Licence because it is expensive and can cost upwards of M80 000.

In Lesotho it costs a mere M2 500 and few foreigners have benefited from that generosity, but the association has now closed the tap.

“The (LEFA technical director Lehlohonolo Thotanyana) has agreed that from now on we are not allowing foreigners unless they are nominated by their countries to be part of our coaching courses because after they acquire their licence they leave, we take even assistant coaches we make them A Licence coaches and they leave,” Mohapi said.

LEFA president Advocate Salemane Phafane added that the quota of youth players has to increase as part of the repackaging of local competitions

Phafane said the majority of players in the A Division should be Under-20 players. Currently, in the A Division the youth quota is two players.

“We have to increase the youth quota; in this day and age can we really be proud that a 35-year-old man is playing for a C Division team? It should be young kids of 17-years (playing). When you go to A Division, 90 percent is U20. I think next season it’s going to increase,” Phafane said.

“We will only be developing if a minimum of five are players are Under-20,” the LEFA president added.

“We are not going to develop if we continue using old players and yet when it comes to the national team people start saying coaches are playing old players, where will they get the young ones when we play old players in the league?”

Tlalane Phahla

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Lebetsa delighted with Likuena call-up

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MASERU – Linare youngster ‘Mellere ‘Miller’ Lebetsa is over the moon to have made Likuena’s preliminary squad for the upcoming 2023 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Comoros and the COSAFA Cup scheduled for June and July respectively.

The 22-year-old has impressed playing for Linare, who are in second place in the Vodacom Premier League under the mentorship of Leslie Notsi.

He is among a group of youngsters in the Likuena squad that are yet to win caps for the senior team alongside the likes of Seahlolo Mosoeu, Koenehelo Mothala, Lelula Phoshuli, Mokoteli Mohapi and Makhetha Mohlomi.

“It’s very exciting and a big honour for me to be handed this opportunity to train with the national team,” Lebetsa said.

“To be honest, it has always been a dream for me to one day find myself playing for the senior national team because I got a chance with the Under-20 in 2019 playing at the COSAFA Cup in Zambia.”

The young defender explained that having several of his seniors from Linare in the national team set-up has helped him settle.

“It was not really a big challenge for me to adapt after the call-up to train with Likuena as a I have a number of my teammates from Linare, who have been with Likuena for some time,” the 22-year-old said.

He stated that he looks up to experienced defender Rethabile Rasethuntša, who has been part of the Likuena set-up for the last three years and is also one of the captains at Linare.

“He is one player I look up to since I joined Linare from Nyenye Rovers in 2019 because I think he is a very focused player, who is disciplined on and off the field.

“It’s not a surprise that he has been part of the national team set-up for such a long time because he has been consistent for Linare and I would like to emulate his successes,” he said.

Lebetsa said he will make the best out of the opportunity handed to him by the Likuena coach to continue where he left off during his time with the national Under-20 side, Makoanyane XI.

“I know there is still a long way to go for me as a new face in the team, but just being part of the team says a lot about my potential to one day represent my country at the highest level,” he said.

“I tasted international football before with the Under-20 playing the likes of Mozambique and Mauritius at the COSAFA Championship held in Zambia in 2019, unfortunately I missed out on other games because of my injury.

“Age is still on my side and with opportunities like this, I have no doubt that I will become a better player for Linare and the national team,” he said.

Lebetsa is part of the Linare squad trailing Bantu by four points going into the last two fixtures in the race for the Vodacom Premier League title.

Mikia Kalati

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