Serving as a television pundit, Klopp expressed deep dissatisfaction with the overall technical standard of the fixture, questioning the structural discipline of both teams on the pitch following the last red card. He said: "This situation pretty much sums up the whole match. Tactically, that was just poor! Simply not good from both teams. 11 against 9 and then you run into a counter-attack. Why? Because the backline was sitting too deep. That was a general issue throughout the entire game. South Africa didn't exploit it at all."
Klopp's damning evaluation was widely shared across broadcasting networks, with fellow analysts echoing the sentiment that the highly anticipated opening game lacked elite competitive edge.
Former Germany international Christoph Kramer expressed his disappointment at the lack of intensity on the pitch. He stated: "You sort of get the feeling that it's so highly charged, and I also expected that kind of intensity and for the spaces to open up. But I thought it would lead to real battles on the pitch, and that wasn't really the case. It's great that they are playing there, but it felt more like a charity match."
Veteran German manager Christian Streich was equally unimpressed, focusing his critique directly on the African nation's lack of tactical discipline and spirit: "I was disappointed with South Africa because I thought they would have better organisation and show more fight."
Despite securing three points, El Tri must immediately address the tactical vulnerability exposed by the pundits before facing more potent attacking opposition later in the group stage. The suspension of captain Montes presents an immediate selection headache for the coaching staff, forcing a defensive reshuffle.
Meanwhile, a depleted South Africa squad must swiftly rebuild their shattered discipline and organisation if they are to maintain any realistic hope of qualifying for the knockout rounds.