Brazilian Joel Santana arrived in South Africa on Sunday to begin a 27-month contract as coach of 2010 World Cup hosts South Africa.
He succeeds compatriot Carlos Alberto Parreira, the 1994 World Cup-winning coach who quit Bafana Bafana last month to be with his ill wife in Rio de Janeiro.
Dressed in a grey suit, the tall 59-year-old Santana walked from the airport building to a waiting car, left for a hotel without talking to the media and later watched a first division league fixture.
The Brazilian is scheduled to face a local media largely critical of his appointment for the first time on Monday and will name a squad on Wednesday to face Nigeria on June 1 in a 2010 World Cup-African Nations Cup qualifier.
Santana resigned from leading Rio club Flamengo to take his first national team post and hopes to maintain the slow, steady progress of Parreira in trying to turn African football middleweights into serious World Cup competitors.
At a media briefing here last month, senior officials from world football controlling body Fifa expressed hope that Santana could produce a team capable of reaching the 2010 World Cup quarterfinals.
But that is a tall order as Bafana Bafana fared poorly at the 2008 African Nations Cup under Parreira, losing to Tunisia and drawing against Angola and Senegal in Ghana to make a timid first round exit.
South Africa outclassed Paraguay 3-0 near Pretoria during March in a friendly which triggered widespread optimism, but the game against bogey team Nigeria in Abuja should prove a more reliable barometer of progress.
Santana inherits a team that has discovered a promising goalkeeper in 20-year-old Itumeleng Khune, but lacks authority at the back, guile in the middle and punch up front.
Parreira left leading scorer Benni McCarthy from Blackburn Rovers out of the Nations Cup without explanation and one of the first tasks facing Santana will be what to do with the temperamental but talented goal poacher. – Sapa