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Motaung said he is not personally responsible for the matter.
“How would you take responsibility? It is a collective responsibility, ”he said. “We serve as a collective, we work as a collective. We’ve never won a cup or a league and I say, ‘I won the league.’
“It is a collective. The club worked as a collective to combat this case. So I take responsibility for anything that happens at Chiefs because I am the manager. But it is a collective.
“I will sit here and answer you and tell you: we were not wrong, there was nothing wrong we did.
“I’ve been doing this player-signing thing for years. It’s not about cutting and pasting when you walk into a store, buy food, and go out. “
The Motaung was told that some fans believe that he, or the club, owes them an apology for the transfer ban situation.
“No, we cannot be responsible nor do we owe an apology. I mean it’s part of the business, ”he said. “We have signed players before, we have lost players before, every year. I mean it has been going on for years.
“The only challenge we are facing now is that a ban came up, and this is the first time we have faced this type of ban. But this challenge has been there in football. If we apologize now, it means that you can no longer sign players in football. Because there is this challenge that still continues in the future ”.
The Chiefs, after a rocky start to 2020-21 with new coach Gavin Hunt, will face the Lamtonville Golden Arrows in Saturday’s DStv Premiership matchup at Sugar Ray Xulu Stadium in Clermont, Durban.
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