
Absa Premiership
It’s a very long time since we have a second-leg Soweto Derby with so much at stake with both teams still well and truly in the title race.
It’s a very long time since we have a second-leg Soweto Derby with so much at stake with both teams still well and truly in the title race.
Defending champions, Mamelodi Sundowns, host Kaizer Chiefs on the opening day of the 2018/19 Premier Soccer League season.
Football fans who’ve been starved of competitive football are eagerly awaiting the start of the Absa Premiership season this weekend and there isn’t a better way to kick off
They don’t get any bigger than this! It’s the table toppers against the defending champions in the headline fixture of the PSL weekend.
Both teams are all about fighting for survival and trying to finish in the top eight.
It’s the biggest, the baddest, and the most anticipated game of the season! Yes, you guessed right! Orlando Pirates and Kaizer Chiefs do battle in the final Soweto Derby of the league campaign.
ABSA Premiership continues to excite fans and football lovers across the country when Mamelodi Sundowns travel to the Western Cape
Kaizer Chiefs and Mamelodi Sundowns battle it out at the FNB Stadium this Saturday in what should be a mouth-watering affair.
One of the biggest derbies in the country, and that simply means that form should be thrown out the window!
South Africa’s greatest soccer rivalry takes centre stage on Saturday as Kaizer Chiefs battle it out with Orlando Pirates in an enticing league encounter.
The biggest clash of game week 23 will be played on Thursday when Mamelodi Sundowns lock horns with SuperSport United, with both teams hoping to bounce back from defeats.
South African horseracing falls under the Asian Racing Federation and the Graded status of races is decided by the Asian Pattern Committee (APC)
Explained – the circumstances behind the decision by the connections of the dual Grade 1- winning sophomore One Stripe to ‘bypass’ the R1,5 million SplashOut Gr1 Cape Derby on 22 February in favour of a likely final run on South African soil in the non-black type Big Cap
With the Aga Khan’s breeding and racing programme very much geared towards the classics, it can be argued that South Africa, where speed, rather than stamina is the hallmark of its racing programme, has failed to capitalise on the excellence of especially its female families
Rob Haswell tells that he has had horses trained by Nathan Kotzen for more than twenty years and pulls us up for our Umthombothi Stakes ‘flop’