KAIZER Chiefs co-coaches Cedric Kaze and Khalil Ben Youssef looking to finish in the Caf Champions League spot.
Image: Itumeleng English Independent Media
Kaizer Chiefs are closing in on a return to CAF interclub football — but the bigger question is whether that should be celebrated or simply expected.
Amakhosi’s recent run of form has placed them firmly in control of a top-three finish in the Betway Premiership, putting them on course for CAF Confederation Cup qualification.
After a turbulent few seasons, that alone represents progress.
And we also now know the Glamour Boys could join Durban City in the competition after they sealed their place by winning the Nedbank Cup.
But this is Kaizer Chiefs. And at Naturena, the benchmark has never been participation — it has always been dominance.
On the surface, a third-place finish signals stability. Chiefs have shown improved structure, better game management and a renewed sense of resilience, particularly in high-pressure fixtures like the recent Soweto Derby draw against Orlando Pirates.
That result, and the broader unbeaten run, suggests a team that has matured. Yet context matters.
Chiefs are not in the title race. They are not competing with Mamelodi Sundowns for top honours. And for a club of their stature, that absence is as telling as their improvement.
This is where the debate sharpens.
Is qualifying for CAF Confederation Cup a step forward — or evidence of how far the standards have dropped?
There is a case for both.
On one hand, Chiefs are clearly rebuilding. After years of inconsistency, they have found a level of rhythm and identity, even if it has required a more pragmatic approach at times.
Securing continental football would reward that progress and provide a platform to grow.
On the other hand, CAF Confederation Cup is not the competition traditionally associated with Chiefs’ ambitions.
The expectation has always been the CAF Champions League — and more importantly, competing for it through a genuine title challenge. Settling for third risks normalising mediocrity for a club built on winning.
There is also the danger of illusion. A strong finish to the season, particularly when the title is already out of reach, can mask deeper issues.
Chiefs have improved, yes — but questions remain about their consistency against top opposition and whether this level can be sustained over a full campaign.
And hovering over all of this is a critical decision off the pitch.
Co-coaches Cedric Kaze and Ben Khalil Youssef are approaching the end of their current deals, with a one-year option still to be triggered.
Whether Chiefs secure CAF football — and how convincingly they do so — will weigh heavily on that call.
Because this is not just about league position. It is about direction.
Ultimately, CAF qualification should not be the destination for Kaizer Chiefs. It should be the starting point.
Because for a club of this size, success is not defined by returning to the continent — but by competing to conquer it.
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