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1997–98 South African Premiership

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Football league season
Premiership
Season1997–98
ChampionsMamelodi Sundowns
1st Premiership title
4th South African title
RelegatedReal Rovers
African Wanderers
CAF Champions LeagueMamelodi Sundowns
African Cup Winners' CupOrlando Pirates
Matches306
Goals736 (2.41 per match)
Top goalscorerGeorge Koumantarakis
Manning Rangers
(14 goals)[1]
Biggest home winHellenic 5–0Santos
(9 August 1997)
Mamelodi Sundowns 5–0Santos
(9 November 1997)
Biggest away winAmaZulu 0–6African Wanderers
(22 February 1998)
Highest scoringSuperSport United 4-4Manning Rangers (8 goals)
(28 November 1997)

The1997–98 Premiership, known as the1997–98Castle Premiership for sponsorship purposes, and also commonly referred to as thePSL after the governing body, was the second season of thePremiership, the top tier football league in South Africa, since its establishment in 1996. The season began on 1 August 1997 and ended on 13 May 1998.Mamelodi Sundowns won their first Premiership title and their fourth South African title after previously winning the Premiership's predecessor - theNational Soccer League - on three occasions (1988, 1990 and 1993). This victory would be the first in a hat-trick of Premiership titles for Sundowns, as the team fromPretoria would go on to dominate the league for the next two seasons. Sundowns also won a league and cup double after winning the1998 Bob Save Superbowl later that year.[2]

As in the inaugural season, the league was contested by 18 teams, sixteen returning from the 1996-97 season and two newly promoted clubs;African Wanderers andSantos. The league would also continue to run parallel to the European football calendar (August–May) and not run concurrently with the African football calendar (January–December).

Club name changes

[edit]

Eastern Cape clubUmtata Bush Bucks decided to dropUmtata from their name from the 1997-98 season, and were instead simply referred to asBush Bucks.

Season summary

[edit]

Manning Rangers found themselves unable to retain their title as they slipped to fifth place in the final standings, some 11 points behind eventual championsMamelodi Sundowns, who won the first of what would be three successive Premiership titles.

Kaizer Chiefs finished in the runners-up spot for the second successive season after finishing five points behind the brilliantBrazilians. The Pretoria giants based their success on a rock-solid defence – just 25 goals conceded in 34 matches – and they were immensely difficult to beat, suffering just four defeats the whole season. TheBrazilians racked up 68 points, five more than Chiefs could manage.

While it was déjà vu for theAmakhosi in finishing second, the same could be said forOrlando Pirates in third. TheBuccaneers picked up 57 points in the season, the same asCape Town Spurs and reigning champions Manning Rangers, but their superior goal difference at least saw them end in the top three.

Bush Bucks,Jomo Cosmos andWits University rounded off the top eight teams.

Moroka Swallows andBloemfontein Celtic again finished in mid-table, while a fierce relegation battle almost saw the likes ofSuperSport United,AmaZulu andSantos suffer the drop.

In a tense relegation battle that raged into the final day of the season, it was newly promotedAfrican Wanderers andReal Rovers - who had managed to avoid the drop by a single point last season - that suffered the ignominy of relegation from the Premiership. They each finished on 31 points, just two adrift of Santos and AmaZulu in 16th and 15th place respectively. Heading into the penultimate round of matches Santos had found themselves rooted to the bottom of the table on 27 points, 3 points adrift of Real Rovers and safety. Santos managed to string together two straight wins to end the season with a 1-0 away win against Wits University and crucially, a 2-1 home victory over fellow relegation strugglers African Wanderers on the final day. Before losing to Santos on the final day, African Wanderers had managed to holdSoweto giants Orlando Pirates to a goalless draw, leaving them confident of securing the result required against Santos to ensure their status as a Premiership club. In the meantime, Real Rovers, who had found themselves safe with two games to go, suffered two straight defeats, which coupled with Santos' two victories confirmed their relegation. Relegation would prove to have a disastrous effect on Real Rovers as they would not return and ultimately the club would cease operations at the conclusion of the 2000-01 season.

Final table

[edit]
PosTeamPldWDLGFGAGDPtsQualification or relegation
1Mamelodi Sundowns(C)34191144825+23681999 CAF Champions League First Round[a]
2Kaizer Chiefs34171255235+1763
3Orlando Pirates34151275233+19571999 African Cup Winners' Cup first round[a]
4Cape Town Spurs34151275135+1657
5Manning Rangers3416995847+1157
6Bush Bucks34141284238+454
7Jomo Cosmos34131293131051
8Wits University34139123934+548
9Qwa Qwa Stars341210123334−146
10Hellenic34128144542+344
11Moroka Swallows34126163042−1242
12Bloemfontein Celtic34125173846−841
13Vaal Professionals34814123644−838
14SuperSport United34715123437−336
15AmaZulu3489173646−1033
16Santos34103213461−2733
17African Wanderers(R)34710174356−1331Relegated to theNational First Division
18Real Rovers(R)3487193450−1631
Source:rsssf.com
(C) Champions;(R) Relegated
Notes:
  1. ^abDue to the Premiership following a different football calendar to the rest of Africa, which runs over a single calendar year and not the international August–May calendar followed by the Premiership, Mamelodi Sundowns & Orlando Pirates were only eligible to enter the 1999 editions of the respective CAF competitions they qualified for.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"South Africa » Premier Soccer League » Top Scorer". worldfootball.net.
  2. ^"Doing the double - Sundowns chasing unique distinction".SuperSport. Retrieved17 September 2024.

External links

[edit]
1998 in African football (CAF)
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