Sunday: Stellenbosch v Sundowns<\/strong><\/strong><\/strong><\/span><\/h2>\n\n\n\nThe Maroons are proudly taking a slender advantage to the second leg, following their gritty 1-0 win in the first. They will be keen to continue their fine start to the season, having won four in four so far across two competitions. Playing their home game at the Moses Mabhida and away from their base may have worked against Nsingizini Hotspurs, but Sundowns will be infinitely tougher than the Swati outfit. While playing away from their fans is a disadvantage, this will be their third game at the same stadium in three weeks, so at least they may have some familiarity with the terrain. But they\u2019ll have to do something they have never done before.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
5 – Stellies will be looking to win five consecutive games for the first time since their 2019 promotion to the top-flight.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Their visitors have failed to score in 210 minutes of competitive action this season, despite pumping 35 shots at goal in these games. They had 24 shots in the game against Polokwane City but failed to create a single big chance (defined as \u201csituations where a player is reasonably expected to score, usually in a one-on-one or from very close range when the ball has a clear path to goal & there’s low to moderate pressure on the shooter). <\/em>Against Stellies, Downs only managed 11 shots, but three of these were big chances. They did not maximize on those, but the latter will please Manqoba Mngqithi more than 20+ wishful shots. He\u2019ll need more of the same for his team to do something that has never been done before:<\/p>\n\n\n\n0 – In MTN8 history, no team has ever lost the first leg of the semi-final and come back to progress to the final (14 previous occasions).<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n