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SABC Football Coverage in the Spotlight

http://www.madamandeve.co.za/week_of_cartns.php

Football is almost never covered in the editorial (“Opinion & Analysis”) pages of our local daily newspaper (2010 World Cup excepted, of course).  But SABC’s failure to broadcast the Sierra Leone – South Africa match from Freetown sparked this response from the editors at The Witness (12 October 2010).

The SABC continues to do a disservice to football fans with its woeful coverage of the sport, especially of matches involving the national team, Bafana Bafana. First there was the decision to show Bafana matches delayed in the build-up to the World Cup, which surely must have been a first for any host national of an event of that magnitude.

The SABC’s latest bungle of failing to cover South Africa’s crucial African Nations Cup qualifier against Sierra Leone in Freetown on Sunday left many fans of the national team disappointed and outraged.

There have been calls for the SA Football Association to take the rights to broadcast Bafana games away from the national broadcaster when they come up for renegotiation in April and hand them to either SuperSport or e.tv.

Given the SABC’s treatment of the national team — prioritising soapies over Bafana matches — this would not be an unpopular decision. It is just hoped that a suitable arrangement can be made where Bafana games are still widely available, including to those who cannot afford satellite television.

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South Africans Betrayed: Public Broadcaster Fails to Show National Team Match



As I sat in front of the box a few minutes ago to enjoy the Battle of Freetown — a crucial 2012 Afcon qualifier between Sierra Leone and South Africa — national broadcaster SABC told us that it was not showing the match. According to news reports, ‘It had emerged on Friday that the SABC had not yet made plans to ensure the game in Freetown would be televised’. 49 million Bafana fans are enraged. Betrayed by a public broadcaster that legally forces South Africans to pay annual fees for pathetic programming and a multibillion rand debt.

Update: SAFA CEO Leslie Sedibe revealed that “For the Sierra Leone away fixture we offered SABC space in the chartered flight and we were unfortunately informed that their crew’s visas were not ready by the time the team departed for Freetown on Friday morning.” Read the story here.

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Cape Town Stadium: Socializing Debt, Privatizing Profits

http://www.mg.co.za/zapiro/fullcartoon/2932

The stadium operator SAIL STADEFRANCE announced yesterday that it is pulling out of the 30-year lease agreement with the City of Cape Town to manage the 4.5 billion rand ($600 million) World Cup stadium at Green Point.

SAIL chairman Morne du Plessis explained that “Shareholders were not prepared to enter the lease under circumstances that projected substantial losses.” Since PSL matches in Cape Town rarely draw more than a few thousand spectators, and rugby already has an excellent stadium at Newlands, local taxpayers must now shoulder the World Cup debt burden long into the future.

For further reading, see my academic journal articles from 2007 and 2008 (free download), in which I argued that in the long run the monumental Cape Town Stadium — built at FIFA’s insistence — would not benefit South African football, but instead would privatize profits (construction companies anyone?) and socialize debt.

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Football in the Okavango Delta

Football pitch at Khwai, northern Botswana (Photo by Peter Alegi)

Even in the world’s largest inland delta — the Okavango delta in Botswana — people play the beautiful game. It was Independence Day (30 September) when I took this photo of the pitch at the relatively inaccessible Khwai village. Wearing their new Drogba and Essien jerseys, my daughters unsuccessfully tried to convince a hippo grazing on the riverbank outside the village to take up position between the goalposts. Maybe he was an Arsenal supporter.