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HANDLING THE GOALKEEPER

4:08 PM Reporter: Ramzi 0 Responses

Case Analysis
Source: The Technician UEFA Newsletter 

Handling The Goalkeeper

MOST TECHNICIANS WILL ACKNOWLEDGE THE IMPORTANCE OF IMPROVING A GOALKEEPER'S HANDLING OF THE BALL. BUT HOW IMPORTANT IS THE TECHNICIAN'S HANDLING OF THE GOALKEEPER?


Previous issues of "The Technician" have discussed the role of the goalkeeping coach and the need to find the right balance between specific keeper-orientated training and sessions which fully integrate the goalkeeper with the rest of the group. However, mental preparation can be just as relevant as time spent between the posts on the training ground. Apart from the demands placed on the keeper during a match - spells of hectic activity interspersed with long periods of inactivity, for example, with a consequent need for special ability to maintain concentration - the goalkeeper has to contend with a series of external factors that outfield players are not usually required to deal with.


It is a well-known fact of life that a goalkeeper is more readily judged by his mistakes than any outfield player. The 'justice' of the penalty shoot-out, for instance, has frequently been debated because the player who fails to convert a spot-kick can all too easily be classed as the villain of the piece. By contrast, it is one of the few occasions when a goalkeeper can be hailed as a hero. During normal play, outfield players are rarely condemned because of an error. The goalkeeper normally is. One of the basic requirements for top goalkeepers is therefore the mental resilience to cope with negative report ing by the media and acknowledgement of the fact that they may only be noticed when they make a mistake.


But what about the goalkeepers who never make a mistake? The immediate reaction is to think that we're talking about a non-existent species.But it is a fact that, if we consider the goalkeeping fraternity as a workforce, the majority are, technically speaking, 'unemployed'. At club and national team levels, most squads contain three goalkeepers, of which only one habitually gets a chance of shining - or making mistakes - on the field of play. Some outfield players might not be classed as 'first-team regulars' but they, at least, have realistic chances of entering the fray as substitutes or during spells when the team is affected by injuries and/or suspensions. Reserve goalkeepers are rarely, if ever, given this opportunity.



For the technician, this can be problematic. In the first place, it converts the selection of the goalkeeper into an important issue - and one which sometimes becomes headline news. But, having made their first choice, many coaches now recognise that, in -management terms, there is a need to give the reserve keeper some football. Sometimes there is a pre-season agreement that, whatever happens, the No. 2 will be between the posts for cup games or, in some nstances, UEFA club competition matches. Rafael Benítez, while leading Valencia CF to a league and UEFA Cup double in the 2003/04 season with a squad that contained two top-class keepers, established a system whereby his No. 2, Andrés Palop, would be between the posts for UEFA Cup matches. He would have kept goal in the Gothenburg final had he not broken a bone in his wrist five weeks earlier and handed the UEFA Cup gloves back to Santiago Cañizares. However, fate redressed itself this season, as Palop was able to demonstrate his worth during Sevilla FC's run to the UEFA Cup final and by keeping a clean sheet against Middlesbrough in the Eindhoven final.


These days, the top clubs recognise the importance of having top-quality cover between the posts. Coaches therefore face the challenge of keeping their 'reserve' goalkeepers motivated and focused on a job they are only rarely allowed to perform. The issue takes on even greater relevance if one considers the circumstances in which the reserve keeper is required to take the field. After weeks or months of 'inactivity', the keeper often has to pull on his gloves without a moment to warm up or to prepare himself mentally for the task in hand. Sometimes, it's because the first-choice goalkeeper has been injured. On other occasions, the situation is one of even greater emergency and tension: the keeper has been red-carded and the first task facing his replacement is to stare a penalty-taker in the face.


Ask Manuel Almunia. After watching from the bench as Jens Lehmann assembled a record-breaking collection of clean sheets during the knock-out rounds of the UEFA Champions League - and having contributed to the record-breaking run during the group stage - the Arsenal keeper was abruptly summoned on to the pitch after 19 minutes of the final and required immediately to set up his defensive wall and deal with a Ronaldinho free-kick from the edge of the box.


All this adds up to a clear demand for the coaching staff to recognise the value to the team of their goalkeepers - plural - and the need to make the peripheral performers feel that they are important components within the team ethic. Treating them as equals on the training ground is probably the easiest part of the equation. The coach also has to ensure that there is a good working relationship between all his keepers and that the reserves are fully motivated and prepared to perform a vital role for the team in crucial moments of matches or at crucial stages of the season. For the media, the 'reserve keeper' might be a forgotten man. But the technician cannot afford to neglect him.

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FROM MERIDIAN TO CHAMPIONS LEAGUE

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Case Analysis: Youth contribution.
Source: The Technician UEFA newsletter.



NOU, UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE MATCHDAY 6. FC BARCELONA V VFB STUTTGART.
BETWEEN THE TWO DRESSING ROOMS, TWO PLAYERS - ONE FROM EACH SQUAD - SHAKE HANDS, PAT EACH OTHER ON THE BACK AND EXCHANGE SHIRTS. NOTHING SPECIAL, YOU MIGHT THINK, IN THIS DAY AND AGE OF CROSS-BORDER MOVEMENTS AND PLAYERS WHOSE PATHS CROSS TIME AND TIME AGAIN. BUT THE IMAGE DID HAVE A SPECIAL SIGNIFICANCE. THE PLAYERS WERE BOJAN KRKIC AND MANUEL FISCHER. STRIKERS, BOTH OF THEM. BOJAN (28.08.1990) WAS 17, 'MANU' (19.09.1989) JUST UNDER A YEAR OLDER. EARLIER IN 2007 THEY HAD ALSO MET IN BARCELONA, TEAMING UP IN ATTACK FOR EUROPE AGAINST AFRICA IN THE UNDER-18 DOUBLE-HEADER THAT FORMED PART OF THE MERIDIAN EVENT. 

FROM MERIDIAN TO CHAMPIONS LEAGUE


Their re-encounter as members of their clubs' senior teams for a UEFA Champions League match was a memorable moment because of its rarity. And it was an image that would have made very pleasant viewing for the participants who had gathered in Cannes for the Elite Youth Coaches Forum a few weeks earlier. The club line-up was formidable:
AFC Ajax, AC Milan, FC Bayern München, Chelsea FC, FC Internazionale, Manchester United FC, Olympique Lyonnais, FC Porto, PSV Eindhoven, AS Roma and Valencia CF. The squad contained former stars such as Giuseppe Baresi, Filippo Galli and Brian McClair. As specialists in youth development, their overriding concern was successfully converting elite youth footballers into established first-teamers - which is where Bojan and 'Manu' appear in the picture as a heartening vignette, albeit a rare one.


In Cannes, one of the concerns highlighted by the club representatives was the difficulty in convincing first-team coaches to include youth players. The firm belief was that the development of elite players is all too often hampered by lack of opportunities to train and play with the best. There was a fear that the gap between first-team and youth football is widening, with more players falling into a void created by lack of senior opportunities at an age when they are no longer eligible to compete in youth competitions.


At the other end of the scale, there were worries stemming from foreign clubs watching and attempting to recruit youngsters in their early teens or at even more tender ages. There are worrying case studies involving players whose
development is truncated by being either removed from their family environment or, indeed, having the entire family uprooted, allied with a lack of guarantees of top-level football. In Cannes, there was widespread acknowledgement among the clubs of a need to stabilise relationships and to establish workable sporting and investment ratios. Various paths towards this goal were indicated, among them legal ways of binding youth players to their educating club for longer periods and/or imposing further, legally enforceable, restrictions on premature transfers - and tightening the regulations on agents who are involved in the transfer of youth players.


There was also a suggestion from the clubs that the 'club-trained' and 'association-trained' rules might err on the side of leniency. The proposal to increase the requirement from three seasons to five (between the ages of 15 to 21) is sure to provoke some interesting dialogue at UEFA debating tables in the next few months...


But these events also offer unique opportunities for UEFA and the elite youth coaches to find out whether they can support each other more efficiently. In Cannes, the general feeling was that UEFA's club licensing system has had a positive impact in that it brought the importance of investment in youth to the attention of the decision-makers within the clubs. This, they feel, is making an important contribution to an increase in the quality of education and facilities.


There was also universal approval for the introduction of a UEFA-endorsed 'A Youth' licence, based on recognition of the fact that coaches require specific skills in each age bracket of development programmes - and it was also acknowledged that there are significant differences in the approach needed for each age group.


Inevitably, the relationships between clubs and national associations provided a major talking point. And there were some interesting ideas, such as associations grouping together the most promising players in a region
and going through specific elite training programmes with the best coaches from the youth academies.


But, above all, the club representatives underlined the importance of laying down efficient lines of communication between clubs and national associations. Or, to be more precise, between the academies or youth teams at the clubs and the national youth teams. In other words, the feeling was that lines of communication need to be established in the areas below the senior teams.
All the clubs were in favour of collaborating with the national association in terms of sharing knowledge and information about individual players. In fact the clubs asked if UEFA could encourage this type of interchange by involving representatives of both camps to take part in future youth football workshops and seminars- an encounter which produced positive results in Cannes.

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FOOTBALL PROSE AND POETRY

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I N T E R V I E W 
Source: "The Technician", UEFA Newsletter.
BY ANDY ROXBURGH, UEFA TECHNICAL DIRECTOR. 


Football Prose and Poetry

Chelsea FC's Luiz Felipe Scolari, the 2002 World Champion with Brazil, and Portugal's EURO finalist in 2004, once said that 'beautiful football is fantastic, if it can be married to results'. The performances of a number of teams at EURO 2008 supported the argument that victory can be attained by playing positive, attractive football. Spain, under the direction of Luís Aragonés, won the 2008 European Championship with a fine blend of efficiency and style. All the statistics confirmed their dominance and skilful approach: the champions registered the top average in quantity of passes (570 against Sweden), the amount of successful passes (forward and medium length), and the number of shots on target. The Spanish based their game on progressive possession play, fluid combinations, and individual flair and imagination. "I like teams who focus on attacking and who enjoy playing. This Spanish team is experienced and love to play this type of football," said Guus Hiddink, the head coach of the Russian national team, after his side had lost twice during the 2008 final tournament to the eventual winners. But for the undemonstrative Luís Aragonés, it wasn't all about flamboyance - pragmatism laid the foundation for romance. Even the Brazilians have been known to take care of basic business.


The legendary Brazilian coach Mario Zagallo said: "I would rather play ugly and win - if you can play beautifully and win, that's great." Coaches who work at the top level, and who are in the results business, will confirm that winning is the priority, but in a world of TV-dominated sports coverage, entertainment and quality of performance are also an important part of the equation. If the public and media label a team as boring, albeit that they are winning on a fairly regular basis, then the coach's position can become precarious - there are high-profile examples in recent years of coaches winning titles and then being dismissed. In today's football environment, the players and owners have become more demanding, while the media and the fans have increased their expectations, often to unrealistic levels. The old maxim 'enough is never enough' comes to mind. A team can lose and play badly, lose and play well, win and play badly, or win and play well. Unquestionably, the latter is the desirable outcome, and Spain in the EURO and Manchester United FC in the UEFA Champions League championed the cause of attacking football while confirming the need for structure, efficiency and, when necessary, caution.


The trends in UEFA's competitions show an increase in fast combinations, spectacular counter-attacks, tactical flexibility, match intensity and technical quality, particularly at high speed. There is less use of rigid systems such as 4-4-2, and the tendency towards the lone striker has often been accompanied by supporting wingers and middle-to-front attacking midfield players. But as José Mourinho said at UEFA's recent Elite Club Coaches' Forum: "Philosophy is one thing, adaptability another." The creative aspects of the game have been flourishing, but counter measures have inevitably been evolving. There is, at the top level, a decrease in midfield orchestrators, surprise tactics (especially on set plays), advanced pressing and risk-taking in general. Countering the counter, with the extensive use of midfield screen players, has become a key development. While most top coaches try to produce results through positive play, they recognise the need for balance - a disciplined defensive structure in tandem with a framework for attacking fluidity and flair.


The 2008 European Championship, which was outstanding from a technical perspective, also promoted the concept of respect. Everyone was trying to win but not with a 'win at all costs mentality. Overall, the attitude of the players towards each other was commendable - some club-mates were, of course, direct opponents in the finals and that probably contributed to the situation. In addition, a member of the UEFA Referees Committee visited each squad at their training camp, prior to the opening match, in order to explain the approach of the match officials and to clarify certain interpretations of the laws. The outcome was very few mass confrontations, isolated cases of dissent, and fewer yellow and red cards than at EURO 2004. With figures to prove it, the finalists, Spain and Germany, showed that success and an adherence to positive sporting behaviour can be compatible.


The aim in professional football is to win matches, but more and more the demands of the owners, the public and the media are to do it with style and panache. Just as in writing, where good prose provides the basic structure but
poetry raises the text to a higher level of creativity, the game at the top level needs both effective, sensible organisation and, whenever possible, a commitment to skilful attacking play. The former coach of Real Madrid CF, Vanderlei Luxemburgo, stressed the attitude required when he declared to Brazilian coaching colleagues at a conference in Rio: "To be afraid of losing removes the willingness to win." EURO 2008 was a wonderful advert for the European game, with the successful sides blending passion for the cause, proficient team play and open attractive football. The aim is to win, but how the result is achieved has gained increasing significance in elite football's demanding environment. "I think all football lovers want people to make good combinations, to get into the penalty area and to score goals," said Spain's Luís Aragonés whose team captivated everyone with wonderful passing movements. The Spanish not only played fantastic football but they married it to results, and in doing so, set a performance standard for others in Europe to emulate.

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EVALUATING COACHES

3:55 PM Reporter: Ramzi 0 Responses

Source: "The Technician" , UEFA Newsletter.

BY ANDY ROXBURGH, UEFA TECHNICAL DIRECTOR. 

Evaluating Coaches

Warren Mersereau, a long-time friend of mine and a business partner of Bayern Munich's Jürgen Klinsmann, contacted me recently to tell me about a study which was carried out in the US by the NFL (i.e. gridiron's National Football League). The aim of the exercise was to find out what the players - those powerful men who wear helmets, heavy padding and full-body uniforms - thought about their coaches.


The vast majority of the players (1,400 to be exact) responded to the questionnaire and the findings were good news for the NFL, with 90% saying that they respected their head coach, three-quarters confirming that they trusted their coach and 79% declaring that their coach was top quality. More than 50% of the players surveyed said that their professional coach was the most influential coach in their lives. The NFL players went on to identify communication skills, motivational ability, approachability, management acumen and a capacity to lead by example as the most desirable attributes in a head coach. This interesting feedback from NFL players provides a reminder that coaches in all professional sports are always under scrutiny and are constantly being evaluated by fans, media, other coaches and, of course, their players.


During recent UEFA coaching events, we addressed the issue of the coach as a leader and examined the qualities that followers (i.e. players) look for in a football boss.
A star guest at these meetings was Paulo Sousa, the Portuguese midfielder who won the UEFA Champions League with both Juventus and Borussia Dortmund. Paulo, now the head coach of Queens Park Rangers in England, shared with UEFA's frontline technicians his experience as a player working with a number of elite coaches. During these sessions he highlighted the main things he had gained from his illustrious coaches. "Carlos Queiroz gave me the mentality to be a winner, to reach the top. Sven-Goran Eriksson at Benfica increased my confidence and inspired me to be a successful professional. Marcello Lippi at Juventus made me think about the game by constantly questioning me about tactics after training sessions or matches. And Ottmar Hitzfeld at Dortmund encouraged me and gave me the responsibility to be a leader on the pitch", said the former Portuguese international, who concluded by saying: "Three things help you to develop into a top player: the level of the competition, the quality of your teammates and the ability of your coach."


Paulo's statement also applies to youth football, and the influence of the coach on young, promising talents cannot be over-emphasised. I once asked some national youth team players what qualities they looked for in a coach. Honesty, approachability, patience and fairness were among the main attributes on the wish list, while passion, ability to read the game, the communication skills to handle one-to-one relationships, football coaching expertise, the strength to demand
and set high standards, and the football- human qualities of a role model were also highlighted. Even youth players know what they need and are willing to make judgements on the capacity of their mentors and guides.


At professional level, when the team is winning and a player is in the starting line-up, then the coach usually gets pass
marks. But when the tactics sometimes fail to deliver, or the substitutions don't quite have the desired effect, or the new
signing doesn't impress the squad members, doubts about the coach's ability begin to surface. In the wise words of
Sir Bobby Robson: "The coach today must be a good judge of a player, because nothing beats signing a new man and knowing that the players are impressed with the new acquisition. Your reputation can depend on your judgement of a player, on your ability in the transfer market."


In the "bullring" of football management, it is one thing to be judged harshly by supporters or the media, but it is a sad
state of affairs when coaches publicly criticise their colleagues. One of the best statements on this unacceptable behaviour was made by Otto Rehhagel following his triumph with Greece at EURO 2004. The German master coach said at the time: "During the tournament in Portugal, Dick Advocaat was being heavily criticised in Holland by players and even coaches - so much so, that he left the coaches' association. If I have to talk about a fellow coach, I prefer to keep my mouth shut unless I can find something positive to say. I find it difficult to swallow that coaches criticise a colleague in a destructive manner via TV. We should never publicly criticise the way a colleague is working." (The footnote to this quote is a reminder that Dick Advocaat, currently head coach of FC Zenit St. Petersburg, won the 2008 UEFA Cup and UEFA Super Cup for his Russian employers).


But back to the players. They will inevitably evaluate their coaches and it is important for each coach to be aware of their players' expectations and needs - not to appease them or accede to their demands, but to understand each individual and to provide strong, appropriate leadership. Recently, in a BBC interview, Cesc Fabregas of Arsenal FC voiced his opinion about his coach, Arsène Wenger: "The only three people I owe something to in my life are my dad, my mother and Arsène Wenger. I'm living a dream, and he [Arsène Wenger] gave me my opportunity at the age of 16." I think it would be safe to assume that it's not just in the NFL that players appreciate their coaches. Given the chance, I'm sure that elite European footballers would be equally fulsome in their praise of those who coach, manage and lead them in today's professional game.

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BETTER COACHES = BETTER PLAYERS

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Case Analysis 
Source: "The Technician" UEFA NEWSLETTER. 

Better Coaches = Better Players

APPARENTLY SIMPLE EQUATION PROVIDED THE TITLE FOR ONE OF THE MANY THOUGHT- PROVOKING PRESENTATIONS AT THE LATEST UEFA COACH EDUCATION DIRECTORS SYMPOSIUM, WHICH WAS HELD IN LONDON. IT WAS DELIVERED BY THE HOSTS, WITH THE FA'S HEAD OF COACHING, JOHN PEACOCK, STEPPING ONTO THE STAGE AFTER A PREFACE BY SIR TREVOR BROOKING.
THEY PAINTED A PICTURE WHICH, TAKEN AT FACE VALUE, MIGHT SEEM TO HAVE LIMITED RELEVANCE TO A MAJORITY OF NATIONAL ASSOCIATIONS. HOWEVER, EVEN IF THE PROBLEM MIGHT NOT BE COMMON, THE FA'S REACTION MAY WELL LIGHT BEACONS ALONG A PATH FOR OTHERS TO FOLLOW.



First of all, the picture. It's no secret that England's Premier League is a magnet to the gilt-edged properties in the modern game. A review of the starting line-ups on the opening day of the current season revealed that only 38% of the players were English - a drop of 9% compared with the previous season and a percentage perceptibly lower than in other major leagues, even the prime importers such as Spain's Primera División or Serie A. The number of home- born Under-21s currently gaining top-division experience is a further cause for concern.

It doesn't take a Sherlock Holmes to detect a need for youth development. But the story doesn't end there. Elite youth development is mostly carried out at academies, many of which are run by the top pro clubs (though not all, as any facility which fulfils the required criteria can attain academy status). In England, the trend is for places at these academies to be increasingly taken by talents recruited at tender ages from other countries. As Peter Sturgess, a key member of John Peacock's team, puts it, "our challenge is therefore to make sure that we give the younger players an education that is second to none in terms of matching anything, anywhere in the world so that, when it comes to selection and recruitment in the 16+ age group, the clubs and the academies begin to choose our kids and start to reverse the trend of bringing in foreign players on the assumption that their technique and game understanding are superior - a theory which I don't accept, by the way!"


As this is clearly a coaching challenge, The FA's reaction has been to devise a grassroots-to-elite plan in which the development of coaches is pegged to the development of players and where one of the fundamental aims is to get the right coach into the right place at the right time. As John Peacock graphically put it, the idea is to jettison quick-fix mentalities and to create a coaching culture built on the concept of a lifelong learning process within a well-structured profession.


Commitment to qualifications and proper recognition of the coaching profession are keystones in The FA's structures for the future. Another of the prime requirements is a national centre - a 'home for learning' for both players and coaches. But, of course, most of the 'real work' is done on playing fields scattered all over the country. This is why, at the base of the pyramid, leaders and volunteer coaches are now able to find guidance and inspiration via DVDs and online educational material.


Along the road from grassroots to elite, the 'gateway' is considered to be the work done by coaches at UEFA B licence level. So the important features here are enhanced understanding of the game, coupled with consistent methodology right along the course pathway. The FA has invested in the appointment of 66 coaches whose brief is to enhance levels of skill by supporting clubs and schools and by working at FA skill centres. At this stage, meeting the needs of the players is crucial while, at the same time, offering them incentives and challenges. Coaches have to recognise which youngsters are struggling to cope, which are coping, and which are ready to forge further up the ladder. This implies the need to assess individual differences and detect, for instance, those who could be late developers.


The FA's structures also feature nine regional coach development managers and a similar number of regional coaches for the 5-11 age group. In this respect, talent-spotting, they maintain, should not be restricted to players. The coaches with the greatest potential in certain areas need to be detected and deployed in the most effective way possible - which is why The FA proposes A youth licences for coaches working in the 5-11, 12-16 and 17-21 age brackets, alongside other specialised areas such as goalkeeping, psychology and the role of the 'academy manager'.


As in many other countries, former pro players are being encouraged to make the transition from pitch to dug-out as smoothly as possible. But The FA's viewpoint is that it's not just a question of recruitment. Having been welcomed at the front door, coaches need to be encouraged to climb the stairs. To this end, the plan is to eradicate the image of coaching as a solitary profession.


There are residential components in most coaching courses where senses or fraternity and team spirit can develop. But The FA's plan is to extend these into a sustained 'distance learning' environment. Coaches are encouraged to be interactive in groups where problems can be discussed and alternative solutions can be proposed. Apart from online exchanges via secure websites, conference calls are arranged so that coaches can blend their thinking on theoretical and practical issues and interchange their experiences in the handling of pro players. The audience in London heard how a guest student from New Zealand is currently earning admiration and Brownie points by getting up in the early hours of the morning to take part in the weekly phone-in.


Initial feelings at The FA are that significant progress has been made in the last year or so and that there are grounds for optimism with regard to the future - especially for the so-called age-appropriate courses which, they believe, not only address the basic challenges but also dove- tail nicely with initiatives around the skill centres and the deployment of the skills coaches in schools and junior clubs. The need and desire to work together with their partners in the professional domestic leagues, as well as the Professional Footballers Association and League Managers Association, is a vital aspect of The FA's strategy. Time and statistics will eventually tell whether home- born talent can reassert domination in the country's elite football. But, as John Peacock's right-hand man Steve Rutter - or Coach Education Manager, to give Steve his correct title - told the participants in London, "the aim is to create an environment in which every individual can reach his or her full potential".

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MESSAGES FROM THE TECHNICAL AREA

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Event Report
Sourse: "The Technician" UEFA NEWSLETTER. 

Message from the technical department

THE TEAM PHOTO BEARS WITNESS TO THE STRENGTH IN DEPTH OF THE 9TH ELITE CLUB COACHES FORUM WHICH WAS STAGED AT UEFA'S HEADQUARTERS EARLY IN SEPTEMBER.
EVEN THOUGH THERE WERE ILLUSTRIOUS ABSENTEES SUCH AS SIR ALEX FERGUSON (SADLY OBLIGED TO ATTEND A FUNERAL), CARLO ANCELOTTI (LEADING AC IN A MATCH IN KIEV TO COMMEMORATE FC DYNAMO'S 80TH ANNIVERSARY) AND FRANK RIJKAARD (FAMILY REASONS), THE LINE-UP WAS IMPRESSIVE AS IT GAVE UNPRECEDENTED GEOGRAPHICAL COVERAGE OF THE CONTINENT.


In any case, the participants would be the first to insist that the important thing was not the star-studded line-up but rather the views they expressed. Since the forum was launched in 1999, many of the coaches' proposals have been converted into reality and many of their current concerns will also be the object of high-level debate in forthcoming months - as will the proposed reforms to the UEFA Champions League and the UEFA Cup which were outlined to the participants by UEFA's president, Michel Platini.

But, like technicians the world over, the favourite pastime at the forum was simply to 'talk football'. The result was a mixture of suggestions and observations which, due to lack of space to do full justice to them,will have to be summarised in more or less telegraphic form.
Among the main concerns was a topic which had also emerged as a talking point during the compilation of the technical report on the 2006/07 UEFA Champions League, namely...


The State of the Pitch


The coaches commented that, in a UEFA Champions League which is universally accepted as the benchmark for other club competitions, the importance of the playing surface is underrated. A fast and true surface can contribute to the match as a spectacle which is what the public expects when they watch UEFA Champions League football. There is a risk that the stars may be eclipsed if the playing surface is not conducive to one-touch combinations and passes take an extra fraction of a second - or even a second touch - to control. In a competition where space is at a premium, the speed of combination play can be a critical factor and, as Arsène Wenger stated in the technical report and in Nyon, "if the pitch is not perfect, the athletes are rewarded, not the artists".


The Last Word

 
One of the trends to emerge strongly from the 2006/07 campaign was for technicians to play their cards in the closing stages of games where there are results to chase or to preserve. In the semi-finals and finals of last season's UEFA Champions League, 23 of the possible 30 substitutions were made (Sir Alex Ferguson didn't make any during the home leg against AC Milan). And the striking fact is that 18 of those changes were rung in the last 15 minutes. "This is when fatigue kicks in," 'Gica' Hagi commented, "and there are greater opportunities to cash in on lapses of concentration and individual errors." Ottmar Hitzfeld added "patience is a virtue and, in the crucial closing stages, factors like mental strength and will to win can be decisive." Arsène Wenger reflected "the speed of transition is one of the key factors and this can fade in the last ten minutes or so. In this respect it's understandable that coaches keep some cards up their sleeves and go for the result in the phase when fatigue is an important element."



Transition


Arsène's views on the speed and efficiency of transition from attack to defence and vice versa were endorsed by his colleagues, many of whom now employ the noun as a training ground command. José Mourinho's players, for instance, know that the shout 'transition' is a galvanising cue to change instantaneously from one mode to the other. Shouting, of course, is not enough. A good deal of training-ground work needs to focus on rehearsing positional reactions to ensure that transitions are made as efficiently and as rapidly as possible - and in accordance with attack-to-defence policies which may vary from aggressive forechecking to a retreat-and-counter philosophy.


Set-Play Specialists


Set plays accounted for just over a quarter of the 309 goals scored during the 2006/07 UEFA Champions League, with just over 10% stemming from free kicks. However, the figures aren't an entirely accurate reflection of the full picture, as a higher percentage of the crucial goals in knockout ties came from free kicks, including Liverpool FC's 'equaliser' in the semi-final against Chelsea FC and AC Milan's opener in the final. Modern-day standards of 'espionage' work against the repeated use of rehearsed set plays with the result that, as 'Gica' Hagi remarked at the forum, each team needs to have at least one dead-ball specialist in the line-up - or, to put it another way, the lack of one creates an empty space in the side's attacking armoury.



Holding Patterns


At the forum, the technicians turned sympathetic ears towards Hugh Dallas when, representing UEFA's Referees Committee, he announced a tougher stance against the off-the-ball pushing and holding in the penalty box which has become almost 'standard practice' at set plays. As Roberto Mancini remarked, "it's not usually violent - it's just a bad habit". Unfortunately, the bad habits are often the ones that are most difficult to kick (in the figurative sense, of course) and Hugh Dallas admitted that it could be a painful and controversial process. Indeed, there may have been controversy by the time these lines reach the printed page. Why?



Coaches are well aware that blocking techniques at set plays are as old as the hills. But there is a tendency for them to escalate into all-in wrestling. Roberto Mancini hit the nail on the head when he commented that, in Italy, at least seven out ten cases of wrestling result in a free kick for the defending team. Hugh Dallas added that it was time for referees to take a look in the mirror and ask themselves if they were 'taking the easy option' - in other words, awarding an innocuous free kick instead of anocuous penalty.



The technicians welcomed the tougher stance - but with two provisos. Firstly, that it should be consistently adopted.



In other words, punishment on a uniform 'always or never' basis is more acceptable than 'sometimes'. Secondly,that the referees should persevere with the tougher criteria and not allow them to become diluted as the season wears on. "The guidelines are clear and have been publicised," Hugh Dallas commented. "What we can't predict is exactly how long it will take the players to get the message." What role should the technicians play in the campaign to break holding patterns? League and Cup The coaches in Nyon acknowledged that there are significant variations between domestic league games and UEFA Champions League fixtures. Takis Lemonis highlighted the differences in transition speeds between the Greek championship and UEFA competitions, while the technicians operating in England's Premier League commented that the use of professional fouls to abort counter-attacks is more consistently punished in Europe than in a domestic league where the emphasis tends to be on allowing the play to flow.



In the UEFA Champions League, they remarked, it is easier to build from the back but, on the other hand, the challenge is then to break down physically well-prepared, tactically well-organised, well-coached opponents who set up a low defensive block.
As Ottmar Hitzfeld remarked, this means that technicians have to be prepared to change team structures in midstream and implement tactical variations. Gérard Houllier followed up by stressing the need for players who are strong enough in dribbling skills to emerge successfully from 1v1 situations and distort opposition structures. "At the same time," he added, "you must be prepared to distort your own structure from time to time, so as to add an element of unpredictability to your play. In a competition of such uniformly high standards, you have to be prepared to momentarily take risks." Gérard was one of many participants who underlined the differences in parameters during a single campaign in the UEFA Champions League - a competition which, like the UEFA Cup in more recent times, features a fascinating combination of league and knockout formats. "In the group phase," he said, "it's a question of accumulating points, sometimes against teams who, rightly or wrongly, consider themselves inferior and set up a solid defensive block. The knockout rounds, especially when you get to the last eight, tend to be more open games in which strength, power and resilience have greater relevance. A prime example of this was AC Milan's performance in Munich, where they were able to defend under enormous pressure and still come away and score." Arsène Wenger summed things up very nicely by adding, "the best sides in the UEFA Champions League are, quite simply, the ones who are good at everything."

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Lippi and Capello analyzing the game.

4:39 AM Reporter: Ramzi 0 Responses


I N T E R V I E W
Source: The Technician N°43•E
BY ANDY ROXBURGH, UEFA TECHNICAL DIRECTOR. 





THEY ARE BOTH ITALIAN, BOTH GRADUATES OF THE ITALIAN FOOTBALL FEDERATION'S COACHING SCHOOL IN FLORENCE, BOTH SERIE A COACH OF THE YEAR RECIPIENTS, BOTH UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE WINNERS, AND BOTH CURRENTLY MANAGING INTERNATIONAL TEAMS.


MARCELLO LIPPI, THE WORLD CHAMPION IN 2006, IS IN HIS SECOND SPELL AS ITALY'S HEAD COACH, WHILE FABIO CAPELLO, TWO YEARS HIS SENIOR, HAS BEEN IN CHARGE OF THE ENGLAND


NATIONAL TEAM SINCE DECEMBER 2007. THE FORMER, A TOP PLAYER AT SAMPDORIA, HAS LED CLUBS SUCH AS NAPOLI, JUVENTUS AND INTER MILAN, WINNING THE SCUDETTO FIVE TIMES,


THE UEFA SUPER CUP, THE INTERCONTINENTAL CUP, AS WELL AS THE UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE (1996); THE LATTER, WHO SCORED THE WINNING GOAL FOR ITALY AGAINST ENGLAND AT WEMBLEY IN 1973, HAS WON DOMESTIC LEAGUE TITLES WITH EVERY CLUB HE HAS MANAGED (AC MILAN, REAL MADRID, ROMA AND JUVENTUS), INCLUDING FOUR SERIE A TITLES AND TWO LA LIGA SUCCESSES, NOT TO MENTION THE UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE AND UEFA SUPER CUP TRIUMPHS WITH AC MILAN IN 1994. MARCELLO AND FABIO ARE RECOGNISED THROUGHOUT FOOTBALL AS TWO OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST COACHES. THEY ARE SUCCESSFUL, TOP-LEVEL PROFESSIONALS AND ARE EXTREMELY WISE - THEY ARE THE MASTER COACHES...




1 • What impressed you most about this season's UEFA Champions League?


Lippi: I was very impressed by the high quality of technical play, in particular FC Barcelona, but also the power and the winning mentality of Manchester United throughout the season. Both of these clubs were worthy of reaching the final. Something that did strike me was the reduced number of centre forwards or target players. In general, we only saw one main attacker and he was left detached when the others went into defensive mode. The great speed, the intense velocity of the attacking play, was the main feature for me from a technical/tactical point of view.


Capello: I would like to highlight the ability of a coach such as Guus Hiddink, who played against FC Barcelona and caused great difficulties for them –in fact he nearly eliminated them.

Guus underlined the need to know your opponent and to plan the game in the right way. It is said that sometimes great players can make the difference, but they can only do that if the game is properly planned by the coach. Another team that really impressed me was Liverpool FC - they are really made for the Champions League and their performance against Real Madrid was great. That is why I was very surprised when they were knocked out by Chelsea. Normally, when Liverpool play at home, it is really difficult for opponents to get a result, but they were not able to play their normal game in this instance. Both Guus Hiddink and Pep Guardiola, especially in the final, were able to cause problems for their opponents, and it is the coach's ability which I would like to highlight on this occasion


2 • Was there anything from a tactical perspective that was important?


Lippi: From a playing point of view, Barcelona's ability to keep possession of the ball was outstanding and, because of this and their good organization, they had very little expenditure of energy - it is 'chasing the ball' that is demanding on fitness. And then tactically, as Fabio mentioned, it was the great ability that was shown in denying space, for example, Chelsea against Barcelona in a tie that lasted 180 minutes. Chelsea were a little un- lucky and this clash was probably the only negative experience for Barcelona during the Champions League season. The tradition, the great technical skill, the way of playing, the football culture of Spanish players, their strong midfield players - they even played like that when they were children - are things we always knew about. But now they have added the capacity to win, because until EURO, Spain were not able to deliver the prize. These players have definitely grown up and they believe they can win.


Capello: I believe that this victory by Barcelona will be very important, but it must be assessed in the right way. I hope English players or German players will not try to copy the Spanish players. Every team has its own features. Some coaches came to England, for example, successful coaches such as Juande Ramos and Phil Scolari, and they tried to bring their type of game to their English clubs in a short time, but it did not really work out because it is difficult to introduce a style which does not suit the characteristics of the players you take over. The top four clubs in England have different approaches -Liverpool's way is different from Arsenal's because Arsène Wenger has a similar approach to Barcelona's passing game. It was more of an issue about defending for Arsenal this time around than one of style. In the future, the key for coaches will be to understand what they have in their hands and how to get the best out of what is available.


3 • What are your expectations for the 2010 World Cup in South Africa?


Lippi: Well, first of all, we have to qualify for it. We have not qualified yet but we are hopeful. Whenever big teams like Italy, England, the Netherlands, Argentina, Brazil and France take part in major events, they do not take part just to participate or to look good - they go to the tournament to win. But the process that leads to victory is a long one. First you need to qualify and, in my case, I need to rebuild the team, making sure I do not throw away too much of what we have. We have some very good players on the team, even though a few are getting older. Then I have to find some good new players to fill the vacancies. So my objective is to try and recreate a group that has the same psychological attitude as my former group which won the 2006 FIFA World Cup in Germany. My aim is clear: to try to win the World Cup.


Capello: Well this is a question that the whole of England has been asking for years. We will try and get as far as possible in the tournament but, before we can think about that, we have to qualify, as Marcello said. The England team is a good team, but we all know that in football there is a fine line between the ball hitting the post and going into the net or the ball going wide of the goal. So, sometimes there is a tiny difference between a positive and a negative result, but we will certainly try and reach the final in South Africa.


4 • What are the difficulties of managing a national team?



Lippi: The main difficulty is a lack of time in order to deliver to your players everything that you have in your heart and in your brain. That is, trying to deliver messages - messages which can build up a team. Today, we cannot afford to overlook everything that goes into building up a team. The national team is not representative of the best players of a nation - I am not even sure that I took the best players, technically speaking, to Germany. Maybe some very good ones stayed at home, but certainly I had super players in terms of belonging to a group, and all the positive effects that come with that. So the difficulty is you have very little time available, but you have to produce this sense of belonging, this team spirit, and you have to do it quickly.


Capello: To me, it was something really new. I was used to working every day as all the club coaches do. I had to address all the problems and constantly talk to the players - I spent a lot of time with them in happy times and difficult times. So creating a group with the national team was really a new experience because there is simply no time available. Also, you have to listen to the clubs' needs, especially when there are friendly matches. They may have some requests and you have to understand them, because we use the players, but they pay them. And the difficulty I have is that I need to prepare a match and immediately afterwards to say goodbye. Then maybe 40 days later they reappear and you have prepared everything for the next game, and the two players you need to talk to most are injured and not with you. Often all the work you have done needs to be scrapped and you start from scratch all over again. So, as a national coach, I agree with Marcello, it is more of a psychological thing than tactical, because you cannot do much in four days. There may be some new players and you need to instruct them. But the important thing is to set up the group and to have players who can express their personality. I had an experience in England at the first training when I thought: 'they are wonderful, they play very well technically, with the ball moving at great speed'. Then we played against Switzerland at Wembley and it was a different scene. They showed fear, were lacking in self-confidence and were not positive. It was a totally different scenario, so it was a mental thing, a burden for them, due to the importance associated with the national team.


Lippi: Referring to what Fabio said, during my first spell with the national team, after we had qualified, we went to play a friendly match in the Netherlands. It was a wonderful game against a very good side, and we won 3-1. But there was a problem because it was November, and I was not due to see them again until the following March three and a half months later, when we had to play against Germany in Florence. So I remember that I told the players that we would stay in touch and talk about the national team, about our qualities, our strengths, and the fact that we had grown up as a group. We did not want to lose everything we had built because we were forced to be apart for so long. When we met in Coverciano, our technical centre in Florence, the day before the match against Germany, I said to our players: 'I believe we will play a very good match against Germany, just as we did last week against the Netherlands'. They looked at me and I said: 'Do not worry, I have not gone mad, but I believe we will play as if we had just played last week'. And, indeed, we did play a wonderful game, and at that point I knew we had grown up as a group and that this was a very important team.


5 • Talking about Coverciano, what did you gain from being a student coach at the Italian FA centre in Florence?


Lippi: Well, your training in Coverciano basically gives you everything you need to be a coach. As a player, if you feel inclined to go into coaching after your playing career, you think you know football - you have discussed tactics with your coach, you have experienced the training programme, etc. After three months at Coverciano, you realize that you are doing things that you never thought about before. All the knowledge you accumulated throughout your career needs to be bound together, and this can be done by studying sports science, physical preparation, technical and tactical training, methods and so forth. The Coverciano experience is useful for organizing all the things you picked up as a professional player.


Capello: When you are a player, all you have to do is think about your own game, your fitness, your diet etc. - you train, you go home, and that is it. But when you become a manager, you have to think about the physical and mental preparation of the whole squad, building up team spirit, being aware of medical issues. Above all, you have to develop your leadership skills. You also realize that you do not focus on yourself, or an individual player, but on the team as a whole. So you are taught all these concepts in Coverciano and this is extremely helpful. Of course, results also depend on luck, but luck is only one element. You are chosen for the job because of your coaching know-how and the training at Coverciano gives you that.


6 • How would you describe your style of leadership?



Lippi: There is a difference between coaching with a club and with a national team. Fabio may not have reached this stage yet, but when you prepare the squad for the World Cup, not just a qualifying match, you have 50 days to deliver something and you spend a lot of time on the field. I believe there are a lot of similarities between Fabio and myself in terms of management. I think players from big teams do not want a father figure, but rather a strong guide, a competent coach who can lead them to the objective they have to achieve - which is winning. Then, whether the coach is nice or not is not very important. When I talk to my players I say: 'I am not your father or your older brother but, of course, if you need to talk to me, I am here for you'. What you need in this role as head coach are the necessary competencies in terms of tactics and skills. But I believe that managing human resources is fundamental today to train at the top level.

Capello: Well, I totally agree with what Marcello said; and he is right, we are very similar. I would also say that as a trainer, every day you have 23 or 25 players, depending on whether it is a national squad or a club, and each one is judging you. You are always under the spotlight in every moment - your reactions when you win, your reactions when you lose. How you manage this, how you manage that, and the way you work on the field. I have not won the World Cup like Marcello, but I think there are certain things which you learn that can be transferred from the club environment to the national team. For example, we lost against France and naturally everyone was very unhappy because of this sad result. But I said: 'Hi guys, today I am very happy'. They all stared at me because they thought I was mad. I went on and said: 'Yes, I am very happy with the way we played the first 30 minutes against the runners-up of the 2006 World Cup. We played at a very high level and we made their lives very difficult. These 30 minutes can provide us with a basis and in the future we will need to extend this 30-minute performance into the full 90-minute match'. From that time forward, we started with a different way of thinking on the field.


7 • How has the game changed since you started coaching?


Lippi: What has changed today is the fact that you have to play in different ways depending on the characteristics of the players you have. In the past, there was usually a common way of playing by most teams. All you had to do was pick the best players for the formation. But now, you need to select good technical players, players who are very strong mentally. In Italy, the teams play in different ways, with various formations, and at national level I need to choose the best formation for the players I select. In general, coaches today need to use different systems to best exploit the skills and characteristics of the players that are available at that particular time.


Capello: I think there have been certain changes, certain evolutions. When I was a player, the Netherlands started playing in a way that resembles modern football. Then Arrigo Sacchi made an impact as an innovator, and we have been following that development for a number of years. As Marcello was saying, I think today you need to consider different formations which you can use against different opponents. You also must be flexible and be able to change, even within a particular game. You need to be able to alter your players' positions in order to hit your opponents at their weakest points. So, as a national coach, you have to pick the best players, the fittest players, but above all you have to be able to create a basic group. This can then be added to, as we did with Theo Walcott who played against Croatia. When the journalists saw the line-up and saw that I was going to play this 20-year-old, they thought I had gone mad. But, in fact, he was the fittest in that role for England at the time, so it was the right thing to do. You need to be flexible, to find the best players for the job, and to make brave decisions.


8 • What is your assessment of Italian football today?


Lippi: I really believe that the real expression of a country's football is not given by the club teams but by the national side. We are still in the process of building up our squad for next year. We are the world champions, our

Under-21s are strong, and there are a number of good youth players coming through, so I think there is a very positive future for Italian football.


Capello: We are now having players born in Italy whose families came from other countries, like Mario Balotelli of Inter Milan, which was not the case in the past. Players like that could be in Marcello's team in the future. It is the same in England where I have some very good Under-21 players and will include them in the national side when the time is right. With regard to football in Italy, and I am sorry to say this, I think that we lack continuity in our way of playing because, in my opinion, though we have great referees, they are obliged to stop the game too often in the Italian league. We are used to a refereeing style which is very strict and this means when any player falls down, the game is stopped. It takes time for our teams to adjust to the European approach. It is the Italian audience, the Italian spectators, who ask for this rigid refereeing - if anything happens and the referee does not stop the game, he will be criticized. We need to improve a lot in this aspect of the game. Italian football is a very good environment for young talents and the young players are really good. So I firmly believe that the future will be a positive one for the national team, but whether it is one, two or three Italian clubs doing well in the UEFA Champions League, we will have to wait and see.


Lippi: Yes, I agree. And I recognize that there is sometimes a bad attitude by the players towards referees and their assistants in Italy. In international football, the referees do not accept certain types of behavior from the players, things which sometimes happen in Italy, so they expel them and then the players are suspended.



Capello: Yes, indeed. This is something which I have seen in England and is very important. Players used to contest everything that the referee decided. The public, the journalists and the managers wanted this to stop, they wanted to see more respect, and this has more or less happened. I think FIFA and UEFA should really push the idea of respect for the referees. It is really disappointing to see all the players crowding around the referee and being abusive. We have to realize that referees can also make mistakes, and this 'attacking the referee' is a very bad example for young players, and stopping it should be official policy.


9 • Is there something that you would like to change or improve in today's football?


Lippi: There are probably many things that could be changed or improved. But for me, it is vitally important that countries maintain their football characteristics. Clearly, South American football has become a bit more European in the sense that they try to be more practical, more organized than before. Meanwhile, European football has acquired some South American elements, in particular technical quality with the ball. But it is important for each country to stay faithful to its 'footballing tradition'. I think English football will always be English at its core, but its national team will be the best expression of that. Regarding Italian football, I think improvements can be made, especially when it comes to attitude.


Capello: If we talk about innovation, I think the use of additional referees beside the goals could prove to be an important development. Also, it is a positive move that we play with the same model of ball in a particular competition - something that has been promoted in the UEFA Champions League. Improved technology has continued to have an impact on the game. When we consider football even seven or eight years ago, it was almost unthinkable to shoot from the kind of distances which are common- place today. Ronaldo's long-range efforts immediately come to mind. So certainly progress has been made thanks to technology, but I think there is still some work to be done in terms of attitude towards the referee and in minimizing the number of mistakes made by the referees themselves, especially in the penalty area, for example, with handling of the ball. We have seen some teams suffer because of these mistakes. With all the efforts that are put in throughout a season, we should try as much as possible to avoid penalizing teams because of such errors. It is really frustrating for a coach to see his work spoiled in this way as he strives to reach the finishing line.

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