Czechs expect a different South Africa, says coach Koubek

The Czech ‌Republic face South Africa in their second Group A game after they both lost their opening World Cup fixtures, but the European side’s manager Miroslav Koubek does not expect their opponents to play in a similar way to their first match. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 17 June 2026
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Czechs expect a different South Africa, says coach Koubek

  • “South Africa chose an unusual style ‌against ⁠Mexico,” Koubek told ⁠reporters
  • “With us, I’m expecting them to play with a slightly different strategy than they did against Mexico“

ATLANTA: The Czech ‌Republic face South Africa in their second Group A game after they both lost their opening World Cup fixtures, but the European side’s manager Miroslav Koubek does not expect their opponents to play in a similar way to their first match.
The Czechs lost 2-1 to South Korea, while South Africa suffered a 2-0 defeat against Mexico in a game where manager Hugo Broos deployed a rarely used five-man defense. Koubek does not anticipate such conservative tactics when ‌they meet ‌on Thursday.
“South Africa chose an unusual style ‌against ⁠Mexico,” Koubek told ⁠reporters on Wednesday.
“They preferred players of different types than usual. That was a different set-up there. So I’m not expecting it to be the same this time. With us, I’m expecting them to play with a slightly different strategy than they did against Mexico.”
A win is almost crucial ⁠at this stage for both teams to ‌maintain their hopes of advancing ‌past the group stage, and Koubek was asked if that makes ‌him more nervous ahead of this game.
“Let me call ‌it a healthy tension before a match,” he replied.
“Well, I’m not going to crumble under the pressure. Of course not, but of course I feel tension.
“We’re in the same situation as ‌our opponent, we didn’t get a point after the first match. That’s a complication, but ⁠we have ⁠all our efforts on winning, on getting the points. We have a different opponent right now and of course we will adjust our strategy to this new opponent.”
Against South Korea, the Czechs played route-one football, and looked to exploit their height advantage on set-pieces, but Koubek remained coy on how his side would play this time around.
“We have tall players, but if we line up the taller players, well, we are not monsters in terms of height,” he said.
“We’ll see whether we keep the lineup the same in terms of height. Let’s be surprised.”