The club will be playing in the CAF Confederation Cup next, heading to Lubumbashi in the Democratic Republic of Congo to take on AS Simba in their second round, first leg tie on October 18.
The game will come a fortnight after their last outing, where they lost to Stellenbosch on post-match penalties after extra time in the first round of the Carling Knockout.
“I believe that it's a break that is welcome because over the past few weeks, we played six games in 18 days, including travelling to Angola, coming back and you know, every game has its own pressure,” Kaze said.
“We never had time to work on everything that we wanted to work on. But now we're going to have time to settle ourselves and to work on things and get better combinations and see what's working, looking forward to our next game in the Confederation Cup.
“The players need to reset because there have been a lot of games recently and physically it was starting to be tough.”
Kaze has been sharing coaching duties with Khaled Ben Youssef since the departure of coach Nasreddine Nabi, whose lawyers are still sorting out his settlement with the club after his firing.
Kaze said it was up to the club to decide whether the rest of the five-man staff that Nabi had brought with him would remain at Chiefs or also depart.
Chiefs had a bright start to the season when Nabi was away tending to his wife who had injured herself in a fall. In his absence they won three games in a row.
But when Nabi returned Chiefs won one out of three and since his departure, they have had a single victory in four games, suggesting the coaching staff are skating on thin ice.
The Confederation Cup tie is against unknown opposition. Simba, not to be confused with the much better-known Tanzanian outfit, is competing in continental competition for the first time.
Chiefs face five games in the space of 17 days before the November international break.