fbpx
Sports

South African Coach Refuses To Accept Defeat, Says His Team Played Better Than Nigeria

The South African head coach, Hugo Broos has not yet come out of the shock defeat his side suffered from the Super Eagle of Nigeria at the Semifinal match which ended in a penalty shootout on Wednesday.

Broos revealed that his side played better than Nigeria and they deserved to win.

The Bafana Bafana squad came back from behind to draw the clash and take the 2023 Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) game to extra time. The Super Eagles scored four of their penalties while Bafana Bafana missed two of their penalties.

Reacting to their defeat, Broos claimed that his side played much better and deserved to win the game to get to the finals.

“Football can be hard sometimes, when you look at the performance of my team, and then there were the penalty kicks. Then you lose the penalty shootout and you are not in the finals.

 “It’s hard to accept that because we played a very good game. I think we were the best team in the first half, we got the best chances, Nigeria didn’t have any chance. In the second half, they had few chances which resulted in a goal and we changed something tactically, and we came back,” he said.

He insisted that his team created more chances, adding that if they had scored, they would have been in the final and not Nigeria.

The Belgian also hailed his team for their performance in the tournament.

“It’s a big disappointment for everyone, and we believe we played a very good game, not just today but throughout the tournament. I’m proud of my players. The disappointment is in not being in the final, but the pride is in having performed well,” he said.

South Africa will now face DR Congo in the third-place playoff on Saturday.

Follow us on social media

Seun Akin

Seun Johnson is a professional journalist and proficient media strategist with over 10 years of consistent work experience. He is Verse in content creation and versatile in editorial administration with a deep knowledge in digital, print and broadcast journalism.

Related Articles

Back to top button