Safa invites your suggestions by email
Safa appeals to public for help
Posted: 2011-12-09 17:30
Safa are planning the way forward after disappointing national team performances, and have appealed to the public to send in their suggestions on how to improve the standard of football.
In a press release, the association says:
After the very disappointing series of events involving some of our national teams in the recent past, we have decided to look deep into the reasons for this malaise in which we find ourselves by posing some tough questions and resolving to do things much differently from the manner in which we have conducted ourselves.
We agree with our disappointed nation that it is no longer good enough to just qualify for major tournaments as we have done with the All-Africa Games and the African Under-23 Championship. It is imperative for us to progress to the later rounds of these important competitions.
The failure by our national teams to progress in major tournaments has left the nation disappointed and disillusioned. It is therefore time that we perform a serious introspection and activate practical, achievable programmes to take our game forward.
"We have previously expressed our regret at the failure by our senior national team, Bafana Bafana, to qualify for the finals of the 2012 Africa Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea and Gabon," Safa CEO Robin Petersen says.
"Our Under-23 national team might have reached the last eight knockout stage but also failed in their quest to reach the London Olympics next year."
The two were recently joined by the Under-20 national team, which was knocked out in the first round of the ongoing Cosafa Youth Championship.
"We fully understand the disillusionment of soccer lovers," Safa president Kirsten Nematandani says. "That is why we are reevaluating the way we perform our functions in order to find a way forward.
"We have identified various practical interventions which we must intensify and accelerate through our various local football associations and at regional level."
Part of these interventions include:
• A high-level Technical Symposium which will bring together all football stakeholders. The intention of this symposium is to find solutions to some of our technical problems, looking into players' long term injuries and getting an update on modern trends in football development;
• We have drawn up a comprehensive programme for our national teams for the coming year and Bafana Bafana are scheduled to play four international matches against high-class opponents in the month of January;
• Safa has invested R3-million into 34 upcoming young coaches who completed the Level Three coaching course and intends to inject the same amount for 30 more coaches early next year;
• Safa has invested heavily in grassroots football and activated a new framework for the operation of football academies throughout the country to improve the standard of play;
• This week, we completed a historic referees programme in which we have run all three courses that make up Project Phoenix. The Safa Referees Department has never run three courses at the higher national level concurrently. This bodes well for the development of referees at the Safa Promotional League level;
• We have also commenced with the rewriting of our coaching manuals to align these with the CAF and Uefa standards and this project will be completed in June 2012
We also invite all our supporters to write to us at info@safa.net to share your views and suggestions and how you would help in the improvement of the sport in the country.



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