Orlando Pirates will roll past Simba when the two teams meet in their much-anticipated CAF Confederation Cup quarter-final second leg tie this weekend.
Pirates trail by a solitary goal scored from what Mandla Ncikazi dismissed as a dubious penalty and will have to win by two clear goals at home to secure a ticket into the last four.
"Pirates obviously have the quality to get past Simba," Morena Ramoreboli tells KickOff.
Ramoreboli is a South African coach at the helm of Botswana club Jwaneng Galaxy who played Simba in the second round of this season's Champions League going out on the away goals rule.
"In terms of quality, Pirates are far much better than Simba. They (Simba) are not as good which is why they make sure that they use whatever resources they must disturb you when you go there," he notes before detailing the troubles that come with visiting Dar es Salaam.
Ncikazi was enraged by the treatment they got at the hands of their hosts in Tanzania from the airport to the hotel until the match day.
"Playing Simba away is always difficult because they do whatever it takes to win the match whether it is good or bad.
"If Kaizer Chiefs can tell you what happened there you will be shocked. Some Chiefs players had to be injected because those guys put something in their pre-match meal which made the players very tired. Your pre-match meal will be prepared separately from the rest of the guests in the hotel.
"Those people (at Simba) will do anything to win a match even if it means killing someone to win a match. They will do it. I'm scared of what those people do. They don't care at all.
"They didn't expect that we would come back as strong as we did so they were not as hard as they were with others like Chiefs.
"With what they do to players then you will understand that at some point they will kill someone. Imagine that some of the Chiefs players had to be injected because the food was poisoned. So, you must understand how dangerous they are," says Ramoreboli.
"At the airport, they will delay you by looking for things that don't make sense so that you get frustrated. They give you a bus not in good condition and they don't care. They make it a point that you struggle to find a pitch to train when you arrive early. It is difficult to get a ground when the host doesn't even want to talk to you.
"I was fortunate that before I went there, I consulted with coach Pitso (Mosimane) and he told me about how stubborn they are at their home ground. I also spoke to someone at Chiefs. On the day of the match, I knew that we can't eat the pre-match meal at the hotel because they have their chefs there.
"Almost all of Tanzania supports Simba and these are people preparing your food. Issues of the referees will always be there when you get to the ground because of the way some decisions happen," he details.