It
was a Second and fourth place finish for the Free State schools in the national
finals of the Sanlam Kay Motsepe Schools Cup, that took place at the King
Zwelithini Stadium in Durban last week.
Louis Botha Technical High School from Bloemfontein finished in second
place and Harmony High School (Virginia) ended in fourth place. This means that, of the R3.4 million in total
prize money, R1.6 will go to the province, making it the second most successful
province in the tournament, behind Gauteng .
This
was Louis Botha’s first national final experience, losing 2-1 to Pretoria’s
Clapham High School in the final. They breezed through the pool stages of the
competition, beating Okiep 2-0, Eric Nxumalo 4-0, East High 1-0 and Ndamase 6-0
ending the pool drawing with Benny’s Sports 1-1.
In
the quarterfinals they beat Mondale on penalties, after the scores were locked
on 1-all at the end of extra time, followed by a 1-0 win over Rosina Sedibane 0
in the semis to get to the finals.
There
were some individual honours for the team - Ofentse Motlhanke was named
Goalkeeper of the Tournament, and coach, Prins Soni, was named the Best Coach
of the tournament.
Louis
Botha won R100 000 as provincial champions and an added R600 000 for second
place overall and Harmony, the most
successful school in the tournament to date, get R400 000.
Team
manager, Norman Ngomba, says the standard of football at the national finals
was exceptional. “The regional and provincial level was what we are accustomed
to, but what we saw at the national finals was completely different, it took us
by surprise,” he said.
The
toughest game, according to Ngomba, was the final against Clapham. “They were
so tactical and organised. They played with a cool head and even when we shut
down their star, Percy Tau, they did not seem to flinch.”
The coach said they went into the tournament with the view of using it as a learning curve for next year.
“Our
strategy was not to put pressure on the boys,” he said. “And our result was way
beyond what we expected. It sure was a learning curve and we learnt something
different from every school. For
example, Rosina was a team that was
united, they played simple football which worked for them, they play excellent
one touch football; Modale High played a different style of play, they were
more tactical, which is how I want us to be; and Clapham had everything,
tactical and technical ability and experience. Their players belong to the
Mamelodi Sundowns Academy and I believe they get a chance to play against the
first team once a month, such experience is what we were competing against.”
Ngomba
says that playing in front of Sundowns president Patrice Mr Motsepe, was
something they will never forget. “All the players admire him, and the work
that he is doing, not just for football but also in the arts and culture as
well as in business,” he said.
He
is also full of praise for Sanlam, the tournament sponsors. “I hope they
continue to sponsor the tournament as they have added so much to it since they
came on board in 2010. It has grown into a much sought after tournament. I now
have insight into insurance and am definitely getting life insurance in the
near future. I want to make sure that if something happens to me, my family is
well looked after.”