Egypt's Pyramids seek support as they eye first African club title
Pyramids' DR Congo's forward Fiston Mayele reacts during the first leg of the CAF Champions League final football match between Mamelodi Sundowns and Pyramids Football Club at Loftus Versfeld stadium in Pretoria on May 24, 2025. (Photo by Phill Magakoe / AFP) /
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Pyramids coach Krunoslav Jurcic has pleaded for
Egyptian fans to attend the CAF Champions League final second leg against South
African club Mamelodi Sundowns in Cairo on Sunday.
While fellow Cairo clubs and African giants Al
Ahly and Zamalek can attract capacity 73,000 crowds to the national stadium,
Pyramids have a supporter base of just a few thousand.
"We are almost alone, we deserve support,
we are representing Egypt," the 55-year-old former Croatia midfielder told
reporters as Pyramids seek a first African title.
After Walid el Karti scored in added time to
snatch a 1-1 first-leg draw with Sundowns in Pretoria last weekend, Pyramids
have transformed from underdogs to slight favourites.
Sundowns had taken an early second-half lead
through Brazilian Lucas Ribeiro only to concede with just 37 seconds remaining.
Europe has scrapped the away-goal rule in club
competitions, but Africa continues to apply it, meaning a 0-0 draw at the 30
June Stadium in Cairo will give Pyramids the title.
A 1-1 draw after 90 minutes and the final goes
to penalties, while a score draw with more goals would see Sundowns crowned
champions a second time after winning the 2016 final.
Winning the premier African club competition at
only the second attempt would cap a remarkable rise for a club bankrolled by
Saudi and, more recently, Emirati petro dollars.
Formed in 2008 as Al Assiouty, the club moved to
Cairo 10 years later, changed their name and had the funds to lure some of the
best talent in Egypt and Africa.
While the majority of the team are Egyptians,
Moroccans Mohamed Chibi and El Karti, Burkinabe Blati Toure and star Democratic
Republic of Congo forward Fiston Mayele started in Pretoria.
Jurcic favours an offensive approach and hailed
the surprise finalists after holding a Sundowns side including South American
stars like Ribeiro and Chilean Marcelo Allende.
"The players were heroes and deserve praise
for their excellent performance. Sundowns are a much more experienced Champions
League team," he said.
Sundowns are competing in the annual competition
an 18th time, and have failed to reach the knockout phase only once since
defeating Zamalek in the 2016 title decider.
Pyramids debuted in the Champions League last
season and exited after winning only one of six group matches. They did draw at
Sundowns then, but fell 1-0 at home to the Pretoria outfit.
Jurcic, who joined Pyramids after the previous
Champions League campaign, admits he is nervous ahead of the return match
"because we have not won anything yet".
Pyramids rested most of their first choices when
beating Ceramica Cleopatra 5-1 on Wednesday, but had to settle for second place
behind Al Ahly in the Egyptian Premier League.
Now their sights are on a double - the CAF
Champions League and the Egypt FA Cup. They face Zamalek in the final of the
domestic knockout competition on June 5.
Sundowns' Portuguese coach Miguel Cardoso wants
to avoid losing successive Champions League finals after his previous club,
Esperance of Tunisia, lost to Ahly last season.
"We need mental strength because the
destiny of the trophy is wide open. We must show the greater desire," he
told reporters.
"Heroes emerge in difficult circumstances.
It is easy to become a hero in favourable times," added the 53-year-old
hired by Sundowns last December.
Like Pyramids, Sundowns have rich backers. The
club is owned by Confederation of African Football president Patrice Motsepe
and run by his oldest son, Tlhopie.
They are the dominant force in South Africa having just won an eighth straight league title, but the trophy they crave is the Champions League.


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