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What is the next level for Kaizer Chiefs in the 2025/26 Betway Premiership season?

Premier Soccer League

Smiso Msomi|Published

Kaizer Chiefs head coach Nasreddine Nabi will hope to use the MTN8 break to build a cohesive, competitive squad before the league campaign kicks off. Photo: Backpagepix

Image: Backpagepix

Kaizer Chiefs enter the 2025/26 Betway Premiership season with the pressure of evolution rather than just restoration. 

The club has spent the last few years chasing stability and dignity, but the expectation now is to chase silverware — with no excuses.

Nasreddine Nabi’s second campaign in charge must go beyond the promise of progress. Chiefs fans are done clinging to signs of improvement — they want results. And with no MTN8 participation after finishing 10th last season, the path to silverware is narrowed. But that may also provide an unintended advantage: time.

With fewer fixtures early on, the “next level” for Chiefs must be to build a consistent identity — a clear way of playing — and ruthlessly execute it. 

That hasn’t been a hallmark of the club in recent seasons, where philosophies were either muddled or changed midstream. Nabi’s mandate now is to make his tactical approach unmistakable, and ensure the players buy in completely.

The off-season signings point to a club intent on refreshing rather than overhauling. The arrival of players like Siphesihle Ndlovu, Thabiso Monyane, and Ethan Chislett suggests a blend of youth and skill with a bit of creative unpredictability. 

Chiefs are not just building for now, but also crafting the next core group. That’s good planning — but planning alone won’t cut it anymore.

The club’s pre-season tour in the Netherlands was tough but necessary. While losing four of the five games was hardly the morale boost the fans hoped for, facing strong European opposition offered the kind of preparation the Soweto giants rarely afford themselves. 

Chiefs can no longer insulate themselves within South African football — they must measure themselves by tougher, international standards if they want to grow.

Key to stepping up this season will be leadership on and off the pitch. It’s no longer enough to have experienced players; those players must lead. 

Thabo Cele, Inacio Miguel, and even returning figures like Brandon Petersen must now assume responsibility. There are no hiding places in a squad trying to break a decade-long league trophy drought.

But the real leap will come from mentality. Chiefs must shift from being a club that “tries” to one that “expects” to win. That’s the difference between top four contenders and genuine title challengers. 

The fans aren’t asking for miracles — but they are demanding grit, tactical intelligence, and performances that match the stature of the badge.

So what’s next level for Kaizer Chiefs? It’s not just better defending or sharper finishing. It’s being in the conversation for trophies in May. 

It’s going toe-to-toe with Mamelodi Sundowns and Orlando Pirates without playing with inferiority. It’s reaching the latter stages of the Nedbank Cup and making a serious run in the league.

The building blocks are finally in place. Now, it’s time for Chiefs to stop rebuilding and start delivering. No more transition. No more excuses.

This is the season where Kaizer Chiefs must stop chasing shadows of the past and carve a winning identity for the future.