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“The mentality in SA is that you are not supposed to talk to match officials‚ but they are supposed to talk to us‚” said a fuming Mosimane.

“Why shouldn’t I talk to them and why is he talking to me then‚ there is communication here and communication is not one-way.

“If I have Victor Gomes on the line or other people‚ I speak to them and they talk but these ones they are magogorwane (amateurs) my bra.

“They shout ‘no‚no‚no‚ stay back’ when you have just crossed the line once.

“He (Tom) is like a school principal with a whip‚ he comes shouting ‘you are crossing the line‚ go back.’ I mean really what are we gonna do with that.

“There are these one who just arrived and they are called mafikizolo (Johnny-come-lately).

“He has just arrived now and he is cracking the whip‚ why can’t I talk?

“We are not small coaches that can’t talk‚ we can talk but they have a problem with that.

“After the match I was speaking to the match commissioner and I said to him ‘don’t you think the referee should have gone with the tackle on Pitso (Sphelele Mkhulise) and he was mumbling

“What I am gonna say?”

PSL prosecutor Nande Becker asked Mosimane to explain himself the last time he criticised match officials but the unfazed Sundowns mentor defiantly insisted that he would continue to express his opinion.

“They can come‚ it is normal‚” Mosimane said.

“I praise the referee and I am called‚ when I criticize them then it is a murder charge‚ I mean really. If they call me it’s okay‚ it’s part of life‚ it’s the way it is.”

Mosimane added that South African referees ‘chicken out’ when they are supposed to take big decisions.

“I think sometimes Ace Ncobo (Mr Spot On) always says it’s not that referees are bad‚ they just chicken out.

“They say two red cards in this match‚ I will be the centre of attraction and I will be trending‚ so let me move away because it’s enough.

“It’s that kind of mentality but we have to move on.”



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