Appendix
Profiles of Some Native Born Coaches
NIGERIA SOCCER COACH
ONIGBINDE Adegboye
Nationality: Nigeria
Birth Date: 5 March 1938
Profile:
Surely everyone in Africa's most populous nation is hoping recently-appointed head coach Festus Onigbinde can find a way to reconcile the flair and attacking verve of Nigerian sides past with a forward-thinking tactical acumen suspiciously absent in recent years.
Onigbinde was promoted from Technical Director to head coach after Shaibu Amodu was handed his marching orders following a poor run of results and rumours of indiscipline at the 2002 African Cup of Nations in Mali.
Oningbinde is a tough customer, an old dog. Though he would deny outright
any assertions suggesting him to be a stern disciplinarian or harsh
taskmaster.
...read more
RUSSIAN SOCCER COACH
ROMANTSEV Oleg
Nationality: Russia
Birth Date: 4 January 1954
Profile:
Oleg Romantsev is a Russian coach of the old-school style. A combative disciplinarian who cares little for public perception, he is a larger-than-life figure in his home country, and he demands complete authority. This has led to occasional confrontations with the media and his players, and he has even refused to honour FIFA's touchline smoking ban during the World Cup final.
However, the former international (12 caps) who was decorated with a medal for service to the nation in 1995, has brought passion and dedication to the formerly great Russian side that has failed to made an impact on international football since the fall of the Soviet Union.
..read more
ITALY SOCCER COACH
TRAPATTONI Giovanni
Profile:
Giovanni Trapattoni's accession to national team coach two years ago was something Italians had taken for granted. The only surprise was that it had taken so long with the 63-year-old's greatest successes coming almost two decades ago.
But it was as a player that Trapattoni's name first became known. Playing as a defender in an AC Milan side which included Karl-Heinz Schnellinger, Gianni Rivera and Jose Altafini, he won two Serie A championships, two European cups, a Cup Winners Cup and an Italian Cup in a 14-year career with the club. He also represented Italy 17 times most memorably in 1963 when man-marking Pele in Italy's 3-0 win at the San Siro.
...read more
MEXICO SOCCER COACH
AGUIRRE Javier
Nationality: Mexico
Birth Date: 1 January 1958
Profile:
Mexico's route to the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan(tm) was by no means plain sailing. Indeed, Javier Aguirre was parachuted in as coach in mid-campaign to prevent a freefall into oblivion. The man affectionately known as "El Vasco", or the "Basque", duly chalked up the 13 points required to qualify his side behind Costa Rica; the product of 4 wins and
a draw......
...read more
REPUBLIC OF IRELAND SOCCER COACH
MC CARTHY Mick
Nationality: Rep. of Ireland
Birth Date: 7 February 1959
Profile:
Faced with a qualifying group that included two semi-finalists from the previous UEFA European Championship, Portugal and the Netherlands, Republic of Ireland manager Mick McCarthy kept his typically stubborn cool and led his side to the most unlikely of playoffs with Iran......
Narrow playoff losses to Belgium in late 1997 and Turkey in 1999 kept the team out of the FIFA World Cup [tm] and the UEFA European Championships and led to widespread criticism of McCarthy's tactical shuffling and desire to play a more attractive, passing style of football. However, the
same doggedness and confidence that made McCarthy a tenacious centre-back and long-time captain for the Republic and British clubs Barnsley, Manchester City, Celtic, and Millwall led him to go his own way as coach.
...read more
GERMANY SOCCER COACH
VOLLER Rudi
Nationality: Germany
Birth Date: 13 April 1960
Profile:
Rudi Vvller leads Germany into the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan[tm] finals as coach just 12 years after winning it as a player. But, while he is remembered as a key player of their footballing hey-day, in the intervening period the health of the German game has altered
dramatically.
In 1996, Vvller ended a hugely successful playing career that had spanned almost two decades. The striker, nicknamed "fox of the box", spent five years at Werder Bremen, before joining Roma in 1987 where he played for another five years winning the Italian Cup in 1991. But it was in France
with Marseille where he gained his greatest prize at club level winning the European Cup in 1993 - the only French club to win the tournament.
...read more
BRAZIL SOCCER COACH
SCOLARI Luiz Felipe
Nationality: Brazil
Birth Date: 9 November 1948
Profile:
Brazil have won the world's most prestigious tournament more times than any other country, but just reaching the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan(tm) was one of the most painful achievements in the history of the national team. ......
Born on 11 September, 1948, Scolari, like many famous coaches, was himself only a modest player, turning out as a defender for sides like Aymore, Caxias, Novo Hamburgo, Juventude and CSA. He was never picked for his country. His training career has been more star-studded, however, and, as
well as coaching Cruzeiro, it has included victory in the Copa Libertadores with Gremio in 1995 and with Palmeiras in 1999.
...read more
SLOVENIA SOCCER COACH
KATANEC Srecko
Nationality: Slovenia
Birth Date: 16 July 1963
Profile:
Slovenia's young coach Srecko Katanec has achieved nothing short of a small miracle with his inexperienced charges. With Russia and Yugoslavia looking like hot favourites to take the top two spots in UEFA qualifying Group 1 for the FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan 2002(tm), Katanec's boys
confounded the experts, scrambling into second place. .....
Katanec, a clever tactician and outstanding motivator, has managed to
banish the minnow mentality from the minds of his men.
...read more
SPAIN'S SOCCER COACH
CAMACHO Jose Antonio
Nationality: Spain
Birth Date: 8 June 1955
Profile:
Most coaches reach the top of their profession after successful spells as club managers winning championships and more often than not gaining experience abroad. However Spain's coach Josi Antonio Camacho's has reached the top of his profession without a trophy to his name.
Camacho's playing career is far more distinguished than his managerial one. One of the defensive pillars in Madrid's exciting "Quinta de Buitre" team, he made 415 appearances as a defender for Real Madrid from 1973 to 1989, helping the "Merengue" to 9 league titles, 3 Copa del Rey victories, 1 Spanish Super Cup and 2 UEFA Cup triumphs.
...read more
SOUTH AFRICA SOCCER COACH
SONO Jomo
Nationality: South Africa
Birth Date: 17 July 1955
Profile:
Ask even the most casual South African football supporter the name of the finest native-born player of all time and his answer will more than likely be a sharp and unequivocal, Jomo Sono.
Now South Africa's best ever footballer has been promoted from Technical Director to acting Bafana Bafana head coach following the recent resignation of much-travelled Mozambique-born Portuguese boss Carlos Queiroz.
Under Queiroz, South Africa strolled through to qualification for the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan[tm]. They finished four points ahead of their nearest rivals Zimbabwe with a record of five wins and one draw in six matches, scoring 10 and conceding just three goals in the process.
...read more
FRANCE SOCCER COACH
LEMERRE Roger
Nationality: France
Birth Date: 18 June 1941
Roger Lemerre had a hard act to follow when he took over for Aimi Jacquet following France's romantic triumph on home soil at the 1998 FIFA World Cup[tm]. But the Briquebec man has moved into the hot-seat with the minimum of fuss and with maximum results.
Lemerre coached France's military team (Bataillon de Joinville) to its first world championship in 1995 - the first time the country had ever won a team tournament. And as national coach has completed all that could be asked of him so far, winning Euro 2000 and last year's Confederations Cup in style.
...read more
URUGUAY SOCCER COACH
PUA Victor
Nationality: Uruguay
Birth Date: 31 March 1956
Profile:
After missing out on the last two FIFA World Cup(tm) finals, the Uruguayans are hungry for top-flight football again. The road to Korea/Japan was anything but easy, but they finally grabbed the last qualifying spot by beating Australia in the play-offs. The "Celestes" finished fifth in the South American table with 7 wins, 6 draws and 5 defeats and used two coaches: Argentinian Daniel Passarella who resigned in November 2000 and Victor Pua, the present incumbent.
...read more
DENMARK SOCCER COACH
OLSEN Morten
Nationality: Denmark
Birth Date: 14 August 1949
Profile:
Brought in as the coach of Denmark after a disappointing performance at Euro 2000, 52-year-old Morten Olsen had national expectations on his shoulders heading into a potentially difficult qualifying group for the 2002 FIFA World Cup Korea/Japan[tm], which included Bulgaria, N. Ireland, Iceland, and the Czech Republic. But his team remained unbeaten and gained automatic qualification ahead of the fancied Czechs by two points.
It was not all plain sailing for the Danes, however, and Olsen suffered his fair share of early criticism. But it was also clear from the outset that the man who replaced Bo Johansson had improved the spirit of the team significantly.
He also shepherded a changeover in the dynamics of the side, with many older players making room for an exciting new generation of Danes. In keeping with this more electrifying style, Olsen has been open to a more attacking 4-3-3 system, which plays to the speed and potential flair of
the team and allows more freedom than the rather one-dimensional team of 2000.
...read more
POLAND SOCCER COACH
ENGEL Jerzy
Nationality: Poland
Birth Date: 6 October 1952
Profile:
When Jerzy Engel took up the reigns of Poland's national team
two-and-a-half years ago, few people gave him much of a chance of
surviving for very long. The press and public had expected a big name
Henryk Kasperczak, Franciszek Smuda or Pawel Janas - or even foreigners
like Anghel Iordanescu or Sepp Piontek - to be given the role. So when
Engel's name popped up, it was immediately criticised. But the 50-year-old
has achieved the unexpected and coached the nation to their first World
Cup in 16 years...........read more
USA SOCCER COACH
ARENA Bruce
Nationality: USA
Birth Date: 21 September 1951
Profile:
Bruce Arena took over as the head coach of the U.S. national team shortly after their disappointing last-place finish in the 1998 FIFA World Cup France(tm) and almost immediately changed the focus of the team's mindset from past shortcomings to future success.
After Steve Sampson was sacked in the wake of his U.S. team's failure to earn a single point in France, Arena was the obvious choice for a replacement, as he was without question the most accomplished American coach ever.
While some doubted whether any American coach could be successful at international level, and many others still question his tactics and player selections, Arena has the perfect temperament to deal with criticism.
...read more
PORTUGAL SOCCER TEAM
OLIVEIRA Antonio
Nationality: Portugal
Birth Date: 10 June 1952
Profile:
The daunting prospect of continuing the form of the Portugal team that reached the semi-final at Euro 2000 fell to 50-year-old Antonio Oliveira, whose task it was to lead the side to their first World Cup since 1986. The former international, in his second stint in charge of the national team, took over after Humberto Coelho resigned and demonstrated wisdom by largely letting the very talented team continue on in the same style as before.
And yet many had been sceptical about the excitable Oliveira, primarily because he did not possess the track record of his compatriots, Artur Jorge or even his predecessor Coelho. Despite coaching a string of home-based clubs including FC Porto, whom he led to the 1997 and '98
domestic titles, this product of the Portuguese federation coaching system had never proved himself abroad, as his extremely short and unhappy stint in 1998 at Real Betis testifies.
...read more
NEWS ITEM
Nigeria to hire foreign coach after World Cup ouster
Samm Audu
06/09/2002
Agence France-Presse
LAGOS, June 9 (AFP) - Nigeria are to hire a foreign coach after they
failed to reach the second round of the World Cup finals for the first
time, sports minister Stephen Akiga has said.
"You cannot rule out the importance of hiring a foreign coach," Akiga told
the local newspaper This Day.
"Even the inventors of the game, England, have a foreigner as their coach.
So going for one who will have what it takes to reorganise and restructure
the team for the future will not be a bad idea."
Several of the country's top players including Pius Ikedia from top Dutch
side Ajax Amsterdam have also canvassed for the employment of an
expatriate to handle the 'Super Eagles'.
Ikedia told a local television station Sunday that the team would be a lot
better with a foreign coach calling the shots.
Adegboye Onigbinde, a 64-year-old former schoolteacher, led Nigeria to the
2002 World Cup after he was named in February in place of Shaibu Amodu,
who was fired after the team failed to reach the final of the African
Nations Cup in Mali.
Onigbinde's contract is only for the duration of the World Cup.
The coach, who was first appointed to lead the team in 1983, had argued
against the hiring of a foreign coach for the team on the eve of the World
Cup.
Media reports had also linked several foreign coaches including Klaus
Toppmoller of Bundesliga side Bayer Leverkusen with the top Nigerian job
about the same time too.
Nigeria lost 2-1 to Sweden Friday to crash out of the soccer finals in
Asia. They had lost 1-0 in their first group match against Argentina.
Onigbinde has come under heavy criticisms since the first round
elimination of the Eagles in Japan.
"He is a coach who does not like to be criticised. He is a coach who
ignores suggestions and he is a master of wrong selections," said sports
analyst Emeka Odikpo.
The twice African champions were guided by foreign coaches when they
reached the second round of the World Cup in 1994 and 1998. Dutchman
Clemens Westerhof was in charge in 1994 while the Serbian Bora Milutinovic
called the shots four years later.