Durban City’s Coaching Carousel Whirls Again: Klate Gone, Youth Plan Derailed

6 mins read
Football Coaching Youth Development

Durban City FC fired coach Daine Klate because his team was not doing well, ranking 13th out of 13 teams. He was part of a plan to grow young players, but the club kept changing coaches, leaving him with little support. A big loss against TS Galaxy’s reserves was the final straw. Now, the club is facing big bills from firing so many coaches, and their best young player might even leave.

Why was Daine Klate fired from Durban City FC?

Daine Klate was fired as Durban City FC’s DStv Diski Challenge head coach due to poor performance, with the team ranking 13th after 13 fixtures. The final trigger was a 3-1 home loss to TS Galaxy’s reserves, leading to a swift decision by the club’s board.

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The 67-Word Guillotine

At 09:17 on Thursday the club WhatsApp group pinged with a message so short it took longer to scroll past than to read.
“Durban City FC and DStv Diski Challenge head coach Daine Klate have agreed to separate with immediate effect.”
No highlight-reel tribute, no portrait of the coach holding silverware, not even a throw-away line wishing him luck. The club’s social-media team simply swapped Klate’s image for a stock graphic that read “NEXT CHAPTER,” the digital version of paint splashed over a billboard. Within ten minutes the announcement had more shares than the team’s last match-day lineup.

The wording – “mutually agreed” – has become South African football’s polite code for “pack your bags and sign the hush clause.” Lawyers on both sides had ironed out the severance the night before; Klate arrived at the office at dawn, returned his accreditation and was gone before the canteen breakfast shift started. Players received the news in a two-line SMS telling them to report for a 6 a.m. session under “interim leadership.”

For supporters who bought into the preseason promise of “building a spine of winners,” the silence felt colder than the firing itself. Seven months earlier the same media office had produced a slick video of Klate outlining his vision; that clip vanished from the club website before lunchtime, leaving only a 404 error where optimism used to live.


Why Klate Was Lured to the Coast – and Who Authorized the Invite

The chain reaction began the moment Durban City’s new owners closed the deal for Royal AM’s top-flight status in July 2024. Their opening statement name-checked Gavin Hunt, four-time Premiership champion, as the architect of the rebuild. Hunt accepted a three-year contract on one condition: full control over the academy conveyor belt. His first recruitment call went to the winger who had delivered titles for him at both SuperSport United and Bidvest Wits – Daine Klate.

Between 2006 and 2017 the pair collected six major trophies together, including two league medals won in the final minutes of the season. Hunt’s sales pitch in August was straightforward: relocate to KwaZulu-Natal, mould an under-23 side that would graduate to the senior squad within 18 months, then step up to the first-team hot-seat once Hunt moved into the director’s chair. The roadmap borrowed heavily from Stellenbosch’s model of promoting youth mentors instead of importing big-name bosses.

The plan never survived contact with the boardroom. Hunt himself was dismissed in December after a string of league defeats, cutting the legs off Klate’s protection. A second technical overhaul followed in April when interim coach Ernst Middendorp was axed, leaving Klate as the last remnant of the original blueprint. Each change of senior coach shifted academy priorities; by June the project resembled a house where every new owner renovates only the kitchen before flipping the keys again.


Project 13: The Stats Board That Read Like a Verdict

Klate’s Diski Challenge log looked like a bar-code of mediocrity: 13 fixtures, 13 points, 13th on the table.
The symmetry entertained bloggers, but it spooked accountants who had signed off R4.3 million of upgrades to the Dr Pixley Kaseme facility – new irrigation, FIFA-grade grass, analytics software and a gym that can track sleep cycles. Finishing four places above the relegation stream was not the dividend they imagined.

A 3-1 home loss to TS Galaxy’s reserves last Monday was the tipping point. Defeat number six in seven outings shoved the “DDC technical performance” agenda item from the bottom of Tuesday’s board meeting to the very top. Charts showing average sprint speeds and passing-network graphics could not hide a simpler truth: teenagers were being out-run and out-thought by peers who trained on community fields.

The gallows meeting lasted 38 minutes. Klate was offered six months’ salary to walk away, asked to surrender his access card and told the decision was effective before lunchtime. He pleaded to address the squad; the HR manager refused, citing “transition protocols tighter than a Cup final budget.” By 12:30 the academy WhatsApp group had a new admin.


Dressing-Room Whispers, Hidden Bills & What Comes Next

Players speak of sessions that felt like masterclasses and marathons stitched together. Double workouts four times a week, GPS alarms screeching if intensity dipped below 115 metres a minute, late-night video dissections of Manchester City’s positional grid.
“We’re teenagers who six months ago chased balls on a cow-patch in Alice,” one midfielder laughed. “Coach kept shouting ‘RECYCLE!’ so loud pigeons abandoned the stadium roof.”

Injuries mounted faster than the jargon. Thirteen matches crammed inside ten weeks meant midweek fixtures every December, and by January six starters had hamstring strains. Klate begged the senior side for reinforcements on dual contracts, but the interim first-team boss – himself fighting dismissal – refused to dilute his own survival push. The academy bus began to feel like an evacuation vehicle with no driver.

Every sacking leaves a trail of invoices. Durban City have now forked out R1.8 million in severance to Hunt, still owe Middendorp two months’ salary and have added Klate’s settlement to the tab. Factor in relocation costs, visa renewals and the forfeited R650 000 monthly Diski grant for finishing outside the top eight, and the 2025 academy budget is already bleeding R3 million. The brightest jewel in Klate’s squad, 18-year-old striker Lwandlile ‘Benni’ Mthembu, is reportedly fielding calls from Royale Union Saint-Gilloise. His father says the family will “move wherever the coach who trusts him goes,” a clear warning that talent could follow the departed mentor.

Friday’s dawn training has been rebranded an “audition.” First-team assistant Thabo Dladla will run the session while unnamed observers watch from the stands. Klate, meanwhile, has booked an 11:30 flight to Johannesburg where next week’s PSL coaches’ forum will chew over the new sin-bin rule for dissent. Chippa United’s academy have already enquired about his availability; Ghanaian outfit Dreams FC floated a short-term consultancy ahead of their 2025 Confederation Cup group campaign. Somewhere in his carry-on sits a hard-drive marked “Project 13” – drone footage, GPS logs, and the unfinished diary of a rookie coach who learned that the toughest opponent in South African football is not the rival dug-out, but the boardroom ticking clock.

[{“question”: “

Why was Daine Klate fired from Durban City FC?

“, “answer”: “Daine Klate was fired as Durban City FC’s DStv Diski Challenge head coach due to the team’s poor performance, ranking 13th out of 13 teams after 13 fixtures. The final catalyst for his dismissal was a significant 3-1 home loss to TS Galaxy’s reserves.”}, {“question”: “

What was the broader plan for Daine Klate at Durban City FC?

“, “answer”: “Daine Klate was brought in by Gavin Hunt, the then-newly appointed architect of Durban City’s rebuild, with a clear roadmap. The plan was for Klate to develop an under-23 side that would graduate to the senior squad within 18 months, after which he would step up to the first-team hot-seat once Hunt transitioned to a director’s role. This mirrored Stellenbosch’s successful model of promoting youth mentors.”}, {“question”: “

How did coaching changes at Durban City FC impact Klate’s position?

“, “answer”: “Klate’s position was significantly undermined by frequent coaching changes at the senior level. Gavin Hunt, who recruited Klate, was dismissed in December, just months after his arrival. Subsequently, interim coach Ernst Middendorp was also axed in April. These changes meant that Klate lost his key protector and the academy’s priorities shifted with each new senior coach, derailing the initial youth development blueprint.”}, {“question”: “

What were Klate’s team’s statistics and their financial implications?

“, “answer”: “Klate’s Diski Challenge team had a record of 13 fixtures, resulting in 13 points and a 13th-place standing. This ‘mediocrity’ was a concern for the club’s accountants, especially after R4.3 million was invested in facility upgrades. Finishing outside the top eight also meant the club forfeited a R650,000 monthly Diski grant, adding to the financial strain.”}, {“question”: “

What were the financial consequences of Durban City FC’s frequent coaching changes?

“, “answer”: “Durban City FC has incurred significant financial costs due to their ‘coaching carousel.’ They have paid R1.8 million in severance to Gavin Hunt, still owe Ernst Middendorp two months’ salary, and have added Klate’s settlement to their expenses. Combined with relocation costs, visa renewals, and the forfeited Diski grant, the 2025 academy budget is already bleeding R3 million.”}, {“question”: “

What is the future outlook for Durban City FC’s best young player and Klate’s career?

“, “answer”: “The club’s brightest young talent, 18-year-old striker Lwandlile ‘Benni’ Mthembu, is attracting international interest from clubs like Royale Union Saint-Gilloise, with his family hinting they will follow a coach who trusts him. As for Klate, despite the setback, Chippa United’s academy has already inquired about his availability, and Ghanaian club Dreams FC has floated a short-term consultancy, indicating potential new opportunities in his coaching career.”}]

Emma Botha is a Cape Town-based journalist who chronicles the city’s shifting social-justice landscape for the Mail & Guardian, tracing stories from Parliament floor to Khayelitsha kitchen tables. Born and raised on the slopes of Devil’s Peak, she still hikes Lion’s Head before deadline days to remind herself why the mountain and the Mother City will always be her compass.

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