
Cape Town's top-flight hopes hanging by a thread as they navigate Premiership playoffs
Cape Town has a rich history with African soccer. From producing former Premiership champions Santos, to influential teams such as Ajax Cape Town, Cape Town Spurs and Hellenic, the city has been integral in the development of South African soccer.
In addition to these clubs, superstar players such as Benni McCarthy, Shaun Bartlett and Quinton Fortune were produced from the streets of Cape Town. Now all this history hangs by a thread with the city's sole representative in the South African Premiership, Cape Town City, currently in the relegation and promotion playoffs.
Battle for survival
City finished second from bottom in the recently concluded Premiership season. By virtue of this disappointing display, the Capetonians find themselves in the playoffs. They are alongside Casric Stars, of Mpumalanga, as well as North West's Orbit College.
Orbit were Championship runners-up – behind promoted champions Durban City (formerly Maritzburg United). Casric ended the Championship season third. Hence both sides will be participating in the playoffs alongside City.
In the 16-team Premiership, the team which finishes bottom of the league is automatically relegated. This season, as a result of their being expelled from the Premier Soccer League (PSL), Royal AM were the 'relegated' team for the 2024/25 season. After finishing first in the second-tier, automatically promoted Durban Stars have taken Royal's place in the top-flight.
As the two worst-performing teams in the Premiership (behind the grounded Royal), City and SuperSport United were then left to fight it out for guaranteed survival. The team that finishes 15th on the Premiership table must take part in the playoffs.
Change of fortunes
In the end, SuperSport edged their rivals on goal difference. Both teams ended the season on 27 points after their 28 matches, but Matsatsantsa's goal difference of -12 was marginally better than City's -16. The Cape side lost a staggering 15 matches on the way to finding itself in this tight corner.
To compound Cape Town's woes, Spurs were recently relegated from the second-tier of South African soccer – one season after their relegation from the Premiership.
History is marginally on City's side in the quest to preserve Cape Town's pride. In the last 10 seasons, six Premiership sides have retained their status in the top-flight. Casric and Orbit will be drawing inspiration from the four Championship teams that shocked their Premiership counterparts over the last decade.
'A lot of people are heavily dependent on [City and Spurs] to earn a living. Besides that, they are teams that have contributed immensely to our football. Superstars come from those teams. But Cape Town City still have a chance to fight in the playoffs and I just wish them well,' former Bafana Bafana winger Siphiwe Tshabalala told Sowetan.
Those associated with the club, including club co-owner and chairperson John Comitis, will be wondering how their fortunes changed so drastically. In the three seasons preceding the ill-fated 2024/25 campaign, City had not finished outside the top five in the Premiership.
The club is also working on building its own stadium, as Comitis told Daily Maverick in 2024. Relegation would be a major blow for these plans.
'Ultimately, we [City] need to build our own stadium and our own home base. We've had a lot of support from the mayor's office in terms of trying to achieve that,' Comitis said.
False start
A mixed bag of results, which included four defeats in their first 10 league matches, foreshadowed City's troubles this season. The indifferent start eventually cost coach Eric Tinkler his job in December.
Former Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs coach Muhsin Ertugral was recruited in January, but he was out by March after the situation worsened under him. Diogo Peral has been at helm on an interim basis since the sacking of Ertugral, and he is the man charged with saving City's status as a top-flight team.
City, Casric and Orbit will play each other home and away in a mini-league format, and the team that collects the most points at the end of the playoffs will secure a spot in the 2025/26 Premiership campaign. The playoffs kicked off on 11 June, with 0-0 draw between the two second-tier teams. The competition will conclude on 28 June. DM
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


eNCA
5 hours ago
- eNCA
Mulder stops short of Lara Test record before Zimbabwe collapse
Wiaan Mulder denied himself the chance of making a world record Test score before leading a dominant South Africa performance in the field on the second day of the second Test against Zimbabwe at Queens Sports Club on Monday. Zimbabwe were bowled out for 170 in their first innings and were forced to follow on, 456 runs behind, after Mulder, unbeaten on 367, declared South Africa's first innings during the lunch interval on 626 for five. Mulder, captaining South Africa for the first time, was only 33 runs short of Brian Lara's world Test record of 400 not out when he declared. Mulder took two wickets and held a catch at slip as Zimbabwe crumbled in reply. Sean Williams, who was only allowed to bat after five wickets had fallen because of time spent off the field because of illness, slammed 83 not out off 55 balls in Zimbabwe's only innings of substance. Earlier the 27-year-old Mulder, went past the previous highest South African individual score of 311 not out set by Hashim Amla against England at The Oval in London in 2012. Resuming on 264 not out, Mulder became the second South African triple centurion, reaching the mark off 297 balls -– the second-fastest behind India's Virender Sehwag, who took 278 deliveries against South Africa in Chennai in 2007/08. Mulder equalled Amla's record then went past it with successive boundaries off fast bowler Blessing Muzarabani. Mulder faced 334 balls and hit 49 fours and four sixes off an increasingly dispirited and largely toothless Zimbabwe bowling attack.

TimesLIVE
5 hours ago
- TimesLIVE
‘Lara keeping that record is exactly the way it should be': Proteas' record hero Mulder
Wiaan Mulder provided a snippet about himself that partly explained why he chose not to put himself atop one of Test cricket's most notable lists. 'The little guy on the shoulder speaks a lot to be honest,' he told Shaun Pollock in an interview at the end of the second day of a second Test against Zimbabwe the Proteas team he is captaining is dominating. Mulder's own questioning of whether he's good enough has long hampered him. From school days when he was compared to Jacques Kallis, to when he made his first-class debut, while still coming to practice for the Lions wearing his school uniform, to making it into the Proteas team — Mulder has never felt he was worthy. 'When I started playing for SA I was nowhere near good enough,' he said on Monday. So while thousands on social media were questioning why he didn't attempt to match or surpass Brian Lara's world record Test innings of 400, or why he was showing so much humility and his choice illustrated a 'soft mentality,' Mulder has reached a point in his career where it doesn't really matter. The stand-in captain declared at lunch on day two with South Africa on 626/5 having scored 367 not out, the fifth-highest individual Test score in history, placing Mulder among the greats. That Zimbabwe capitulated to 170 then were 50/1 at the close reinforced how much time there is for South Africa to march to the inevitable win, leaving many astounded Mulder did not give himself the chance to go for Lara's record. 'You never know what's my fate, or what is destined for me, but I think Brian Lara keeping that record is exactly the way it should be,' he said. He did admit to feeling a little sad when he went past Hashim Amla's South African record of 311, set against England at The Oval in 2012. 'I've worked with him a little bit for the last couple of years [at the Lions where Amla is the batting coach]. He's a Hall of Famer, it's truly special to go past his record, but I always feel like a lot of the legends deserve certain accolades, so someone like Hash deserves that record, but maybe it was my destiny.' Mulder, is playing in his 21st Test and is at a stage in his career where he feels comfortable with himself as a cricketer. He described on Monday how even when he was dismissed in the first innings of the first Test, he was questioning his worth in the national team. 'When I was run out for 17 I was telling Bedingham and Verreynne that I should just hang up my boots. It was really, really difficult to keep failing and no matter how hard you work you feel like you don't get the positives.' He followed that disappointment by scoring 147 in the second innings and then Monday's stupendous showing. 'But that sums up cricket. You go through phases, where you feel you are doing the right things in the nets, that you're bowling well, you're batting well but you just don't get the results or the rewards for it. 'It's just nice, and it sends a positive message to the other guys who are trying to find form and are a bit down on themselves that if they keep doing the right things, at some stage they will reap the rewards. 'As a team there are a lot of guys who might feel they are under pressure, but if you do the right things for the team first, always, and look after your game, then you can let the outcome go and just play.' Further explaining the decision not to go after Lara's record he said the result for the team mattered more than an individual landmark. 'We've won nine Tests in a row and that is the focus of this team. The focus is not on any individual's career highlights. 'Four hundred is amazing. Test runs don't come easy and there are a lot of Test batters that will want to get as many runs as they can when they feel they are playing well. 'Legends of the game deserve certain accolades. Lara is one of the best to ever play the game. Him having the record is very important, he inspired so many to play the game and it is important that stays his record and the main thing is we win the Test match.' South Africa head into day three needing nine more wickets to claim a series win that in the long term is unlikely to be remembered. But for Mulder, playing as captain for the first time, for Lesego Senokwane and Prenelan Subrayen playing in their first Test and a young group looking to make their mark on the international stage, a Test win is something they can all celebrate.

IOL News
6 hours ago
- IOL News
Mighty Mulder mauls meek Zimbabwe as Proteas Tighten Grip in Bulawayo
Proteas captain Wiaan Mulder scored a record-breaking, unbeaten 367 on Day 2 of the second Test against Zimbabwe at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo — the highest individual score by a South African in Test history. Photo: AFP Image: AFP Wiaan Mulder broke numerous Test cricket records on Monday with an unbeaten 367 on Day 2 of the second Test between South Africa and Zimbabwe at Queens Sports Club in Bulawayo. The 27-year-old now holds several historic milestones: the highest score by a player in their first match as captain, the highest score by a player away from home, the highest ever score by a No 3 batter, the third-highest Test score by a captain, the best strike-rate for a triple century, the fifth-highest Test score in history, and the highest Test score by a South African. One of the records that appeared to hold personal meaning for Mulder — or perhaps even caused a twinge of regret — was surpassing Hashim Amla's 311, which previously stood as the highest score by a Proteas batter in Tests. Amla has served as batting coach at the Lions, the domestic side where Mulder has spent most of his career. '(I was sad) a little bit,' Mulder admitted, after the day's play. 'I've worked a little bit with Hash over the last couple of years, and he's obviously a Hall of Famer, so it was truly special, firstly, to go past his record. But I always feel like a lot of the legends deserve certain accolades, so I'm by no means close to a legend. "Someone like Hash deserves to hold that record. But I guess it was my destiny, and yeah, take it as it comes.' To the wider cricketing world, the big question was whether Mulder might challenge Brian Lara's unbeaten 400 — still the highest individual score in Test history. At the lunch break, Mulder was just 33 runs short of the mark, but he instead chose to declare South Africa's innings at 626/5, giving the bowlers two sessions to attack Zimbabwe. Mulder explained his decision was driven by respect for the game — and for Lara's place in its history. 'I think the first point of it all is we have to keep the main thing the main thing, and that is winning the Test match,' said Mulder. 'I felt we were in a good position to do that, and I didn't have to bat any longer. And also, I think respecting the game is really important — letting someone like Lara keep his record. "He's one of the greatest to ever play the game, so he deserves that. I think we're still in a great position to win the game, and that's all that matters.' Mulder backed up his heroics with the bat by taking 2/20 with the ball, helping South Africa bowl Zimbabwe out for 170. Debutant off-spinner Prenelan Subrayen stole the second innings with figures of 4/42. Reflecting on his all-round performance, Mulder credited the belief shown in him by national coach Shukri Conrad. 'Shuks has backed me for many years from the academy days. I do think it's freed me up a little bit to go and play and not worry too much about surviving and making every run count, but more being able to express myself and play with freedom,' said Mulder. 'I feel like I deserve a position in the team — or rather, I contribute positively with the bat, ball and in the slips overall. I think my role brings a lot of balance to the team. So, all of those things contribute to freeing myself up and just being able to play at the best of my ability.' South Africa enforced the follow-on and now require nine more wickets to seal victory, with Zimbabwe trailing by 405 runs on 51/1.