South Africa's Broos ready for AFCON reunion with Cameroon
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Hugo Broos is hoping to lead South Africa to Cup of Nations glory in Morocco but standing in his team's way in the last 16 on Sunday are Cameroon, the country with whom he won an unlikely continental title in 2017.
The showdown at the compact Al Medina Stadium in Rabat has
the makings of a fascinating contest between a Bafana Bafana side building
towards the World Cup and a Cameroon team that entered the AFCON in disarray.
Cameroonian football federation president and Indomitable
Lions legend Samuel Eto'o sacked national team coach Marc Brys just weeks
before the competition started, replacing him with David Pagou.
Brys had just overseen a play-off defeat against the
Democratic Republic of Congo in the same Rabat stadium to which they will
return this weekend.
That ended their hopes of making the World Cup, but they
have bounced back so far at the Cup of Nations, winning two and drawing one of
three group matches.
Broos, a Belgian compatriot of Brys, knows all about how
dangerous Cameroon can be coming into an AFCON tournament to a backdrop of
turmoil.
He led a makeshift Indomitable Lions squad, missing some of
their biggest names who had refused to accept call-ups, to the title in Gabon
in 2017.
They beat Egypt 2-1 in the final to claim their fifth
continental crown.
"If you told someone before the tournament we would get
to the final they would have laughed, but this for us was a big
motivation," Broos said at the time.
Fast forward nine years and his focus now is on improving on
South Africa's performance at the last Cup of Nations in Ivory Coast in 2024,
when they reached the semi-finals and eventually finished third.
Broos, now aged 73, has also led Bafana Bafana to
qualification for the upcoming World Cup, their first appearance since hosting
the tournament in 2010.
They topped their qualifying section ahead of Nigeria and
will face co-hosts Mexico in the opening game on June 11 before also taking on
South Korea and a European play-off winner in the group phase.
Before that, a tough path through the Cup of Nations
knockout stages awaits South Africa and Broos, whose approach to the
competition was marred by allegations of racist and sexist remarks.
The former Belgian international apologised last month after
comments made about defender Mbekezeli Mbokazi and the agent who handled the
player's recently-agreed transfer from Orlando Pirates to Chicago Fire.
He is certainly not afraid of speaking out, and criticism of
the atmosphere at this Cup of Nations cannot have gone down well with
organisers or with the South African president of the Confederation of African
Football, Patrice Motsepe.
"I don't feel the same vibe as what I felt in Ivory
Coast and in Gabon," Broos remarked.
"I don't know how to explain it but in Ivory Coast and
Gabon, every second of the tournament you felt that you were in a tournament.
"When we went with the bus to train, people were waving
flags, and here you feel nothing.
"There is no vibe. There is no typical AFCON vibe. I
don't feel it here."
He has also not been entirely pleased with his team, who
needed late goals to beat Angola and Zimbabwe in the group stage, either side
of a narrow loss against Egypt.
Broos says they keep "falling asleep after taking
leads", and will expect an improvement against Cameroon.
Remarkably, it will be just the second meeting of the sides
at the Cup of Nations -- the only previous clash came in their opening group
game in 1996, when hosts South Africa triumphed 3-0 on the way to winning the
trophy.
Whoever emerges victorious on Sunday will face Morocco in the quarter-finals, provided the hosts get the better of Tanzania in their last-16 tie.


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