South Africa took third at the Africa Cup of Nations after beating DR Congo 6-5 on penalties to secure their best finish at the tournament in 24 years.
Bafana Bafana captain Ronwen Williams was the key man again, as the quarter-final hero saved two spot-kicks.
First, DR Congo captain Chancel Mbemba had the chance to win it, only for Williams to block, before Meshack Elia’s penalty was also saved.
The game, which ended goalless, went straight to penalties after 90 minutes.
After losing their semi-final on spot-kicks, South Africa became the first team to play three straight Afcon shootouts after Williams had saved four penalties in the quarter-final win against Cape Verde.
In Abidjan’s Felix Houphouet-Boigny stadium, the goalkeeper again proved the central figure after midfielder Teboho Mokoena, a primary factor in South Africa’s superb run in Ivory Coast, hit the post with the first penalty.
Shortly after the skipper secured South Africa’s success, Belgian coach Hugo Broos, 71, was given the bumps after adding a third-place ‘bronze’ to the ‘gold’ he secured with Cameroon’s 2017 triumph.
Bafana Bafana last stood on the podium in 2000, when beating Tunisia on penalties, while DR Congo were trying to equal their best tournament since 1998, which was when South Africa last contested a Nations Cup final, two years after their sole title.
The Leopards will wonder how they came away fourth after missing several chances, with Mbemba and Fiston Mayele wasting inviting opportunities late on.
Having now won all three of their Nations Cup encounters with DR Congo, South Africa, meanwhile, will feel their dramatic victory rewards a campaign when they have both surprised and impressed many observers.
Williams shines again
Having fielded a starting XI largely composed of players from Pretoria-based Mamelodi Sundowns, who won the inaugural African Football League last year, the settled side have conceded just one goal in their last six games – in the semi-final defeat to Nigeria.
Nonetheless, they rode their luck against the Congolese – who had made nine changes to the team beaten in the semi-finals – at times.
Fielding two players who had not played at all in Ivory Coast, the Leopards got in behind South Africa’s defence on many occasions, but Silas was foiled by some expert goalkeeping from Williams while striker Simon Banza then failed to generate power when well-placed.
A hard-fought first period ended with just one shot on goal apiece, with DR Congo – who won the title in 1968 and 1974, forcing nearly all the best moments throughout the 90 minutes, only to rarely test Williams.