The path to the perch, Part 1: 1986-1991

8th May 2013 – the date when Sir Alex Ferguson pulled down the curtains on his glorious 26 year adventure with Manchester United and football. During his time at Manchester United, Sir Alex Ferguson managed to win a total of 28 major trophies including 13 Premier Leagues, 5 FA Cups and 2 Champions League. He also got Manchester United the distinction of being the only English side to ever complete the treble when current Manchester United manager scored the famous late winner against Bayern Munich in the 1999 Champions League final. ‘The greatest manager ever’, as they say about Ferguson and although it’s up for debate you wouldn’t have a conversation about it without mentioning Sir Alex. 

However, it wasn’t always the case for Ferguson. His first 4 years as Manchester United weren’t all about trophies but rather marred with inconsistencies and a lot of doubts. There is a famous newspaper clipping with the title ‘Fergie must go’ signifying the fact that fans weren’t happy with Ferguson’s first 3 and a half seasons as Manchester United manager. In fact, it is widely noted that the FA Cup final victory over Crystal Palace in 1990 which saved Ferguson’s job as Manchester United manager. 

Today, we take a look at his lesser known years as Manchester United manager. 


Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson in his office, circa December 1986. (Photo by Harry Goodwin/Paul Popper/Popperfoto via Getty Images/Getty Images)

Early Career

Sir Alex Ferguson or just Alex Ferguson at the time, began his manager career in Scotland with St. Mirren in the Scottish second division. He was their manager from 1974 to 1978 and took them from lower table obscurity in the second division to league champions in 1977. The average age of that St.Mirren squad was 19 and their captain, Tony Fitzpatrick, was 20. A superb achievement for Ferguson who himself could be considered young for a manager at just 36. In 1978, Ferguson jumped ships to go and manage Aberdeen. There was a lot of speculation and rumours that Ferguson had already taken the Aberdeen job and owing to that St.Mirren decided to sack Ferguson becoming the only club ever to sack Alex Ferguson. 

At Aberdeen, the Scottishman managed to win the league title in the 1979-80 season. This was the first time a team rather than the Glasgow clubs (Celtic and Rangers) had won the Scottish Premiership in 15 years. Ferguson created a siege mentality at Aberdeen accusing the media of being biased towards Celtic and Rangers and used that to motivate his own team. ‘Furious Fergie’ was the nickname given to him by the Aberdeen players. The success at Aberdeen continued, with him winning the Scottish cup in 1982. 

The following season, he led Aberdeen to even more success by winning the European Cup Winners’ Cup, knocking out the likes of Bayern Munich and Real Madrid. Aberdeen won the league for a further 2 seasons under Fergie. In 1986, he made his intentions clear that he wanted to leave Aberdeen. He managed Scotland in the 1986 World cup but after a group stage exit, he decided to step down as Scotland manager. 

After rejecting job offers from Arsenal, Tottenham Hotspur and Wolverhampton Wanderers, Sir Alex Ferguson was appointed as the Manchester United manager on 6th November 1986, taking over from Ron Atkinson. 


Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson pictured in an office at Old Trafford circa 1986 in Manchester, England. (Photo by Rusty Cheyne/Allsport/Getty Images)

An inconsistent start

There is a challenge called the “Sir Alex Ferguson challenge” popular among Football Manager players where you take over the team which is 19th in the Premier League on 6th November and try to replicate the success SAF had. That was the situation Ferguson was tasked with. Manchester United were 19th after finishing 2nd last season and were struggling. Ferguson guided them to an 11th placed finish and brought back some long needed stability to the club. 

The following season was great for Ferguson. He made his first signings at the club, Viv Andersen from Arsenal and striker Brian McClair from Celtic.He guided the red devils to a first second placed finish in 7 years but United were way off the standards of Liverpool and Fergie knew it. A home defeat in the FA Cup quarter finals against Nottingham forest was a bitter mark at a rather optimistic campaign. 

The optimism among the Manchester United faithful grew at the start of the 1988-89 as Mark ‘Sparky’ Hughes returned to the club. Ferguson also signed a 17 year old Lee Sharpe from Torquay United and goalkeeper Jim Leighton from Ferguson’s former club Aberdeen. A 6-game winning run in January saw the red devils climb upto 3rd in the league table but a drastic collapse in form saw them go down the table and eventually finish 11th. 

Fergie was ruthless and responded to this by making new signings such as Mike Phelan, Neil Webb, Danny Wallace, Paul Ince and a club record signing in Gary Pallister. This saw fan favourites and stalwarts of the Atkinson era, Gordon Strachan, Jesper Olsen, Paul McGrath and Norman Whiteside leaving the club. 


Alex Ferguson (centre) flanked by his new signings, Viv Anderson (left) form Arsenal and Brian McClair from Celtic at Old Trafford. (Photo by PA Images via Getty Images)

Silencing the Critics

The clearing out of fan favourites was met with a lot of backlash from fans but the fans from the outside still believed in the rebuild project at Old Trafford. A 4-1 win over champions Arsenal on the opening day fuelled some optimism among the Old Trafford faithfuls but a dip in form and the new signings failing to impress led to many reports in November that Ferguson’s time could be up. 

“3 YEARS OF EXCUSES AND IT’S STILL C**P – TA RA FERGIE”. This was the famous banner floated around Manchester. A heavy 5-1 defeat against local rivals Manchester City and being booed off the pitch against Spurs made things worse and it wasn’t hard to see why. United’s form in the league was awful which was showcased by the fact that they finished only 13th in the league. Fans were not happy, the media was on Fergie’s back and it looked like the inevitable might happen after all.

“We were hearing things the night before we went to play Nottingham Forest. You hear these rumours – ‘If we don’t win today the gaffer could go.’ We were struggling in the league. Mark Robins scores and people say that saved his job,” Paul Ince recounted. 

The 1-0 victory over Nottingham Forest in the FA Cup quarter final was what, many say, saved Ferguson’s job at Old Trafford. But the board during the time constantly reassured that his job was never under threat at the time but if the team didn’t show any improvements towards the end of the season then they would’ve been forced to take a call. 

To be fair to Manchester United, they were doing quite well in the cups. They got all the draws away from home in the cup competitions and did well to win them and reach the final against Crystal Place. This was it, the defining moment of the season, a match that would make or break Ferguson’s legacy at Manchester United. And it’s moments like this that force a manager to make the tough calls and Fergie was prepared to make one. 

Jim Leighton, the goalkeeper who brought so much success for Ferguson at Aberdeen was underperforming and not justifying his place. Ferguson would have smashed the Guillotine over Leighton’s head long before he actually did if his assistant, Archie Knox, had not intervened. But after being caught in no man’s land for the first Crystal Palace goal in the 3-3 draw, Ferguson was left with no choice for the replay.

On loan Luton Town goalkeeper Les Sealey would be the first choice for the replay. Ferguson described him as ‘arrogant’ and ‘cocky’. He wrote: “Was he a better goalkeeper than Jim? No, but he thought he was, and that can sometimes be important in a Cup final.” 

It proved to be the right decision. United won 2-1 in the replay claiming the first trophy of the Ferguson era and the floodgates then began. The ban for English teams playing in the European competitions was lifted and United qualified and won the Cup Winners’ Cup next season. They finished 2nd in the league in the 1990/91 season behind rivals Leeds United. That season was then followed by the first league win under Sir Alex Ferguson in the 1991/92 season, thanks to two dramatic late goals by Steve Bruce against Sheffield Wednesday on the final day of the season. 

And the rest, as they say, is history. 

D10S- The God of Naples

A mentality among Neapolitans has always existed- of waiting for their saviour. The people in the city always felt that they have been robbed by the people from ‘North’ and someone will come to rescue them. A historic city situated on the Amalfi Coast and looked over by Mount Vesuvius, it has been a centre of attraction in every known era of history. It has been a centre of arts, education, religion, politics in the past and it eventually became a centre of football too, when the God truly blessed city in late 1980s- not by Saint Gennaro (the City’s patron saint). But it was blessed with a certain Argentinian who just wanted to enjoy the beautiful game. This Argentinian then went on to defy the odds and became the saviour the city and it’s people always wanted. With his achievements, he became a folklore.

This Argentinian is none other than Diego Armando Maradona. After starting off his career as a 16 year old professional with his boyhood club Argentinos Junior, he then switched to Boca Juniors and eventually the European elites came calling in. FC Barcelona paid a world record fee for the dimunitive attacking midfielder. But his time in Barcelona was marred with injuries, controversies on and off the field. A talented youngster born to play football looked out of sorts with life in Europe. Then in summer of 1984, one of the most shocking transfers took place which took entire footballing world by storm. Napoli came in with another world record bid and within few days, Diego swapped an economically rich city of Barcelona with one of the most poor, if not the most poor cities in Europe- with ‘Napoli’. This was a move which took everyone by storm. Many were shocked that how a perennially underachieving club like Napoli came up with such offer while many people in the city cannot even afford basic amneties along with many criminal families creating havoc with their illegal activities within the walls of this holy city. But this was the start of a journey which will be etched forever in the hearts of people of Naples and his tales be sung for many generations to come.

Maradona’s arrival at the San Paolo in 1984 from FC Barcelona can be seen as the catalyst for Napoli’s ultimate success, but it took the club 3 years to win laurels. Diego was the the most important piece of that puzzle. The ambition showed by the perennial underperformers from the south of Italy eventually proved to be fruitful and put the holy city of Naples on the pantheon, becoming the first club ever from South of Italy to put a fight against the richer clubs from Northern Italy and deliver a ‘Scudetto’ for the ‘Partenopei’.

The Neapolitan side finished at 8th position, 10 points shy of eventual and shocking champions Hellas Verona in his first season at the club. His brilliant form in 1985-86 season took Napoli to 3rd place with him ending up with 11 goals, taking this form to the FIFA World Cup (and rest is history as we know it). Going into his 3rd season with the club, the missing pieces in the puzzle finally were filled and it clicked. Coached by a fiery but pragmatic Ottavio Bianchi who won plaudits by taking Atalanta from 3rd division to Serie A a few years back. The club was led by ‘El Diego’ and hometown hero Ciro Ferrera with new signings of Fernando De Napoli and Andrea Carnavale also clicking instantly.

De Napoli along with fellow teammate Salvatore Bagni ran the Midfield which allowed El Diego to create his magic further up the field. Along with Carnavale and Bruno Giordan, El Diego contributed to 10 goals with further contribution of 8 goals from Carnavale and 6 goals from Bruno Giordan which made up of a good chunk of overall tally of goals scored by the team. The faithful supporters of the club became the ’12th man’, supporting the club and their main men through thick and thin. San Paolo became a fortress with the club going unbeaten at home in 1986-87 season of Serie A. Napoli recorded 2-1 wins against fellow Scudetto rivals Juventus and AC Milan, both home and away which helped them catapult to 1st place on the table.

Then came the date: May 10th, 1987. A date forever etched in the history of the club and the city. “The world had changed. The noisiest, the most crowded city of Europe was deserted”. These were the words of Italian anthropologist Amalia Signorelli when describing the state of the city in early hours of May 10th, 1987. In the shadow of dormant Mt. Vesuvius, the city would eventually erupt as the club secured their first ever league title in their then 61 year old history. This was the start of a fairytale journey of El Diego. Napoli further won 4 trophies including UEFA Cup against VfB Stuttgart in 1989 and another Scudetto in 1990 followed by Coppa Italia and Italian Super Cup. This period of 6 years was the most successful period in club’s history.

A city which used to be a laughing stock in the eyes of rest of Italy ended up defying odds. In 1990 WC (which took place in Italy only), Maradona led Argentina and Italy were hot favourites to win the title. San Paolo hosted to one Semi Final and with such small odds, the 2 favourites ended up playing each other, in Naples. That Azzuri team had the representation of 4 players from Napoli in their starting XI, another big achievement for the city. After winning everything there was to win with the club and his constant off the pitch struggles with substance abuse, Diego’s time in Napoli eventually came to an end in 1991. The ‘messiah’ departed and the city couldn’t recover from this. One person wrote, the day after his departure, wrote on the walls of Forcella quarter: “Diego Facci Angora Sognare” which meant “Diego, make us dream again”

Rest in Peace “El Pibe de Oro”.

Football Around The World: Sweden

When the name Roy Hodgson is brought up, what comes to your mind first? Maybe as the manager who took Fulham to the Europa League final and an FA Cup victory. Maybe as someone who has travelled the world, experienced different things in football. Or maybe as someone who failed at Liverpool and subsequently at England. A veteran, a journeyman or maybe a washed up dinosaur, Hodgson, now 73, has been given a lot of nicknames in his career, most of them depending on how you look at his long career and even where you live.  For Roy, his failed tenures in England largely outweigh the good that he has achieved in football. In Sweden though, it is a totally different story. 

Hodgson is a legend in Sweden. Brighton and Hove Albion boss Graham Potter says so himself who also began his managerial career in Sweden in Ostersunds. His status as a legend is not limited to just his achievements with Halmstad and Malmo but also how Swedes think about football. Hodgson’s first success as a manager came in Sweden when he won the title with Halmstad in 1977, the first league title in the club’s history. Halmstad usually spent their days at the bottom places of the league table in Sweden before Hodgson’s appointment so his league win was a credible achievement for the then 29 year old Englishman. Roy won the league for Halmstad again in 1979 and then led Malmo to 5 successive league titles from 1985 to 1989. 

“You won’t get many more experienced in world football than Roy Hodgson in terms of his variety of experience. In Sweden, he’s a legend.”

-Graham Potter on his experiences while managing in Sweden.

Hodgson’s managerial career began with a simple phone call from Halmstad chairman, Stig Nilsson, to Bob Houghton, who was coaching the Swedish giants Malmo. “Yes, I do. His name is Roy Hodgson” were the words exchanged between Nilsson and Houghton and Roy was contacted. Halmstad played a friendly against Bristol City and Hodgson was one of the people attending. Bristol City ran riot and won 4-0, Hodgson was left unimpressed but still jumped at the chance of managing a first team, and the rest as they say, is history. 

To fully understand the depth of how Hodgson became a legend in Sweden, we have to back up the story a little bit. 

 

It all started when Atvidabergs FF, a small town club, broke Malmo’s dominance in the Allsvenskan when they won the league for 2 consecutive years in 1972 and 1973. Atvidabergs weren’t shy to run and their whole style of play was based on them outrunning the opponent. They had players who can run and can think on their feet which helped them to league glory and also some kind of European success. Swedish football didn’t normally make headlines in the international newspapers but they did when Atvidabergs knocked out Chelsea in the Cup Winners’ Cup in 1971 but Atvidabergs success was short lived. 

Owing to the bankruptcy of the company from where Atvidabergs got most of their money from, the club were forced to sell their best players in order to survive. Their 2 strikers, Edstorm and Sandberg left to earn their trade in Netherlands and Germany(Then, West Germany) respectively. The squad still did enough to win the league the next season but they eventually collapsed. Their best players moved on to other clubs, some in Sweden, some abroad and thus, their fairytale ended.

Meanwhile, Malmo FF were going through a rebuild when they replaced Spanish coach Antonio Duran, who established their dominance in Sweden with the less experienced, Kalle Hult. Hult tried to innovate the tactics but it didn’t work, something which Atvidabergs capitalised on. By that time, the long serving Malmo chairman, Eric Persson, was thinking of stepping down and he did, in late 1973. Before doing so he handed the responsibility of hiring a new head coach to agent Borje Lantz, a man with lots of connections and someone who knew how to get the job done. Lantz called Allen Wade in England to recommend a new coach. Wade recommended Bob Houghton. 

Bob Houghton, in South Africa at the time and on the verge of getting a job offer from QPR, was paid in full for the flight back to England by Lantz. His only condition – Houghton must stop in Malmo first. Houghton had all the coaching badges and was ready to take up management when Lantz came calling. Houghton saw the setup at Malmo and watched the team play and was largely impressed which led to him taking the job with little to no consideration. 

Tactics wasn’t a big thing in Sweden at that time. Most of the tactics depended on whether “our winger is capable of beating their left back” and so on. The players at Malmo were not the most disciplined either with Kalle Hurt being lenient on such things, a huge contrast to Duran and as the players would learn, Houghton. Bob Houghton brought in lifestyle changes for the Malmo FF players. The way they played, they trained and everything that would affect their football was changed and the players took that on very well. There was now a proper formation, a proper system, each player had a role, a purpose. Malmo started to look like a team rather than depending on the aforementioned ‘tactics’.

Malmo again won the league in 1974 and in 1975 under the guidance of Bob Houghton and they played a totally different style of football than it was normally seen in Sweden. Some part of it wasn’t received well, such as the offside trap which would lead to many stoppages in the play which annoyed a lot of supporters and also referees. Malmo fans were ready to fight tooth and nail to anyone who dared criticizing the club and it led to a huge debate among the Swedish fans. The brand of football wasn’t something one would consider ‘attractive’ but it worked and the proof was in the pudding as Malmo would reinstate their dominance in Allsvenskan. 

One person who took a bite of that pudding was Halmstad chairman Stig Nilsson. Halmstad were promoted back to the Allsvenskan in 1974 and finished 11th in that year. They again survived with a 12th placed finish but their manager stepped down. In need of a coach and not shy at all, Nilsson called Houghton for a recommendation which led to Roy Hodgson being appointed as the coach of Halmstad in 1975. 

Houghton and Hodgson were good friends having done all their coaching badges together. Despite being unimpressed when he watched Halmstad lose 4-0 to Bristol City in the pre-season, Hodgson still took the job. Halmstad were struggling and they needed saving. As it turned out, Roy Hodgson was their saviour. 

Compared to Houghton, Hodgson had a totally different job. Malmo were used to playing on their own terms, to assert domination whereas a major rebuild was needed at Halmstad. Hodgson didn’t make too many changes in terms of new additions but instead made do with whatever he had. Fringe players were shifted to a new position, new roles such as Anchor Man in midfield and no.10 were introduced to Swedish footballers. Halmstad were a team of misfits, the unlikeliest of champions which makes Hodgson’s feat even more admirable. 

The team from the outside looked like a carbon copy of Malmo but if looked closely, it was anything but that. Halmstad had their own identity, their own playing style which, barring some basic similarities, was totally different from what they were doing at Malmo. While Houghton was (and still is) a 4-4-2 aficionado, Hodgson was always more adaptable, more open to different ideas, to trying different things. There were new training routines everyday, players played where they enjoyed playing the most and everyone had their defined roles, all a bit new for the Swedes, brought to life by two young managers born in Croydon. 

Houghton’s Malmo side playing the European final in 1979 was another feather in the cup for the two young English managers taking Sweden by storm. A depleted Malmo lost to Brian Clough’s Nottingham Forest but just reaching the final was revered in Sweden. Houghton left Malmo in 1979 to manage Bristol City and took Hodgson as his assistant but by then, Swedish Football was changed forever. 

At first, the tactics brought in by the Croydon boys weren’t well received. You see, Swedish Football was mostly influenced by how the West Germans played it.”How football should be played the right way”,  The Swedish National Team manager Arne Larsson said when he practically declared a war on the 4-4-2. But when Sven-Goran Eriksson won the league with IFK Gothenburg in 1983 using the 4-4-2, Arne Larsson decided to use this formation once for the National side against Netherlands away from home. Sweden won that match 3-0 and there was no turning back. 

The revolution brought about by Hodgson and Houghton still has its impact over how Football is viewed in Sweden. Not just their tactics but their training methods, their attitude and general outlook on football was changed by the Englishmen. Hard Work, determination, knowing your role and always putting the team first. The changes brought in by Hodgson and Houghton soon started to spread across all of Sweden with Sven-Goran Eriksson being the first one in 1983. Soon, everyone else was doing the same, even the National Team. In fact, the National Team still plays the 4-4-2 and their manager Janne Andersson has also graduated from the Hodgson/Houghton’s academy of football tactics. 

Swedish Football is on the rise, displayed by their heroic and unlikely journey to the World Cup round of 16 in 2018. The team has been doing so well recently that it even tempted their arguably greatest footballing export, Zlatan Ibrahimovic, to come out of retirement. There are a lot of promising Swedish youngsters who are already earning their trade across Europe. Alexander Isak regularly turns out for Real Sociedad, Pontus Dahlberg is at Watford but is currently out on loan. Victor Gyokeres is also loaned out to Swanswa from Brighton. Mattias Svanberg plays in the Italian League with Bologna. Another player playing in Italy, and probably Sweden’s best youngster, is Dejan Kulusevski who plays for Juventus. The youngsters along with the more experienced players like Victor Lindelof, Emil Forsberg, Pontus Jansson and Robin Olsen give Sweden an excellent group of players who can disrupt any team on their day. 

Adding to these, there are also other promising youngsters on the rise such as the 17 year old striker Emil Roback who moved to Milan in the summer. 19 year old Jack Lahne plays on the right for the French club Amiens. Jesper Karlsson also plays on the right for Dutch club AZ Alkmaar. The Swedish League also has some very promising prospects playing in their league such as Kevin Ackermann, Marcus Degerlund, Daleho Irandust and Tim Prica. The future for Swedish football looks bright. 

Ask anyone supporting Malmo above the age of 30 about Hodgson and they will have only nice things to say. Hodgson and Houghton changed the way the Swedes see, play and breathe football. The two Croydon born Englishmen just wanted to make a name for themselves in football management when they moved to Sweden. They became legends while doing so. 

Football Around the World: Ukraine and it’s ‘football of the future’

A country marred by controversies and disasters when under control of the USSR, a small revolution started on the Ukrainian soil which has influenced football a lot, even to this date. And it all started with one man, who completely changed the face of football in USSR (and Ukraine post USSR’s breakdown)- Valeriy Vasylyovych Lobanovskyi, who put Soviet football at the footballing map; both at Club and International Football level with his multiple spells at FC Dynamo Kiev and USSR’s national team.

Playing career

Valeriy combined football with mathematical calculations and Sports Science to improve the performances, both as a full-time professional player and later on as a coach. He made his debut as an 18-year old player for his boyhood club, FC Dynamo Kiev. He spent 7 years at Dynamo Kiev where he formed a lucrative partnership Valentyn Troyanovskyi on the flanks. From 1960 onwards, he was a full-fledged member of first team and with his unorthodox style of play, he helped his club win Soviet Top Division in 1961, becoming the first ever club not from Moscow to win the title. He spent 7 good years at Dynamo Kiev before leaving for brief spells at Chronomorets Odessa and Shaktar Donetsk.

During his playing career, he became famous for his ability to accurately deliver curling deliveries from set-pieces- often Lobanovskyi was able to score the goal directly from the corner. He had regularly been working on these shots during training sessions, using Magnus effect and his own calculations. The Soviet press often used to compare him with Brazilian forward Didi who curled the ball in a similar way at the 1958 World Cup.

When the goalkeeper was too close to the closest bar, Lobanovskyi sent the ball to the further bar, where Oleh Bazylevych scored a goal.

He was regularly invited to the national team, but due to strong opposition (at the time there were many top-level left-wingers in Soviet Union like Mikheil Meskhi, Anatoli Ilyin and Galimzyan Khusainov) was able to play only two international games, against Austria and Poland.

He hung his boots at the age of 29 years, after scoring 71 goals in 251 matches at club level.

Coaching Career

One year after retiring as a professional football player, Valeriy joined FC Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk as a coach, in 1968. He took the team from 3rd division to the 1st division in a matter of 3 seasons. In the club’s first season playing at top most level in Soviet Russia, Dnipro ended at 6th position- just 2 points short of a ‘silver medal’.

Dynamo Kiev moved in to get him as first team manager and he started his first spell at the club which lasted till 1982 and made Dynamo Kiev a force to be reckoned with at domestic level and even at Continental stage- the club from Kiev became the first Soviet club to win an European Trophy when Dynamo Kiev won the European Cup Winners’ Cup in 1975, defeating CSKA Sofia, Eintracht Frankfurt, Bursaspor and European Powerhouse at that time- PSV Eindhoven on it’s way to the final, before defeating Hungarian side- FK Ferencvaros in the final with a comfortable score line of 3-0. During the tournament, the club won 88.88% of it’s matches, a record which stood for a long time before it was beaten by Bayern Munich in 2019-20 edition of UCL.

This turned out to be a successful year for the Soviet club, since Valeriy Lobanovskyi was co-managing the team with his former team mate- Oleh Bazylevych. Oleh was the theorist, Valeriy the trainer. The duo started what was to be known as the “away model”- playing defense minded football in 2nd leg of Knockout tournaments after getting a lead on aggregate in first leg if the match was at home ground. Then came the icing on the cake, the Kiev team beat the European Giants and current European champions- FC Bayern Munich in Super Cup. The duo ended up winning the World Sports Coach of the year award. The duo then served as coach of USSR’s senior team for 2 years before being sacked. A return to Dynamo Kiev was on the cards for Valeriy in 1984 and then co-managing the national team from 1986-1990 with USSR team reaching final of Euros 1998. But the Dutch team led by Marco Van Basten ended up as winners with Van Basten scoring ‘that’ goal in the final. A lucrative offer from UAE National team saw him pack his bags for Middle East where he managed for 6 years before returning back to his native Ukraine to start a third stint at Dynamo Kiev. In 1997. The team had fallen off the cliff in his absence. But with his appointment and a sudden resurgence of youth prospects in the club ranks, the club started making strides in Europe once again. Valeriy promoted a young Andriy Shevchenko to senior team- the highlight being a hattrick of goals at Camp Nou, defeating the Blaugrana side 4-0 in 1997-98 UCL group stage. The group comprised of Dynamo Kiev, PSV Eindhoven, FC Barcelona, Newcastle United in which the Ukranian side ended up as winners, reaching Quarter Finals but were defeated by the Italian Giants- Juventus. Next season, the team bettered their performances in UCL, reaching semi finals of the competition after defeating the reigning champions Real Madrid 3-1 om aggregate in Quarter Finals.

To this date, Dynamo Kiev remains the only team not from ‘top 5 leagues’ and Dutch, Portuguese and Russian leagues to reach Semi Finals of UCL. Despite losing Andriy Shevchenko, Kakha Kaldaze to AC Milan, club captain Oleh Luzhnyi to Arsenal and striker Serhiy Rebrov to Tottenham Hotspurs; the club still performed at top level.

Lobanovskyi suffered from ailing health ever since he returned from Middle East and suffered a heart attack in 2001 due to which he missed many away games in continental competition due to flying restrictions. On 7 May 2002 during Dynamo Kyiv’s game against FC Metalurh Zaporizhzhya, Lobanovskyi fainted and was hospitalized with a stroke. Lobanovskyi went through a brain surgery and his health was rated as critical. The press, which regularly monitored Lobanovsky’s state of health, wrote that there was hope, but Valeriy Lobanovskyi had not regained consciousness His heart stopped on 13 May at 8:35 pm. At the Champions League final in Glasgow two days later, UEFA held a minute’s silence in his honour.

Lobanovskyi’s funeral on 14 May 2002 was attended by the President of Ukraine Leonid Kuchma, Ukraine’s Prime Minister Anatoliy Kinakh, other politicians, Lobanovskyi’s former players Andriy Shevchenko, Oleg Blokhin, Igor Belanov, Oleksandr Zavarov, Serhiy Rebrov etc. In general, from 60 000 to 150 000 people attended the funeral.

Andriy Shevchenko dedicating his Ballon D’OR victory to his mentor.

Influence on Football

From introduction of Analytics to Sports Science to tactical evolution of the ‘Beautiful Game’, the enigmatic manager influenced the game in various ways. Valeriy saw the game as a system of 22 elements divided into 2 sub-systems of 11 elements. The nuance that Lobanovsky considered the most interesting and important was that the efficiency of the subsystem will always be higher than the sum of the efficiencies of its individual elements. Lobanovskyi insisted that the training process should be modeled, and fragments of future actions on the field should be practiced. According to Lobanovskyi, team coordination was an outdated concept – each player goes out and does what is needed at this time, and how he does this depends on his skill, training, and ability to express himself. But the structure of the game, tactics should not suffer from who acts as a performer in that particular moment.

Many people who worked with him over the course of his career, may it be players or coaches always saw him as a great Psychologist. He was not only a great tactician but a great ‘manager’ too. In terms of tactics, he lined up with a 4-1-3-2 formation on paper with players performing multiple roles and a very fluid transition from defence to attack. The underlying principles of his game were somewhat similar to “Totaalvoetbal” or “Total Football” which was developed by Rinus Michels in same era but the Ukranian focused a lot on physical fitness and diet of the players too so that everyone is in top condition in order to battle fatigue and keep maximum output and efficiency. He stressed a lot on efficiency and it was evident with his success- being 2nd most decorated manager after Sir Alex Ferguson.

In the 1975-76 European Cup games against AS Saint Etienne, Dynamo’s formation featured no proper centre-forward, as strikers Blokhin and Onyshchenko constantly played on the flanks, with midfielders Leonid Buryak, Viktor Kolotov and Volodymyr Veremeyev exploiting the central space as deep-lying forwards, anticipating the False Nine position.

Pressing was always a key element of Lobanovskyi’s teams. The main goal of pressing was to create situations of numerical superiority for Dynamo players where the ball was, and deny opponents both space and time for the right decisions, thus forcing them to always play the game at Dynamo’s pace. The trademark Dynamo counter-attacks would start with a player dispossessing his opponent in midfield, then immediately playing a quick long ball either to the forwards or the advancing full-backs, so as to catch the opposition unorganized. Lobanovskyi always stressed the importance of the first seconds of an attack after winning the ball, as it is in these seconds that the opposition is less ready to defend in an organized manner. Pressing was a collective effort, and whenever a player moved up the pitch, a teammate covered his position. In this way Dynamo minimized the threat of having to face a counter-attack by the opponent in case the ball was lost.

He also relied on defensive stability as well. His teams were infamous for defending leads in away fixtures and relying on defensive superiority in those situations and exact opposite approach in home fixtures of 2-legged ties.  In addition, they also used tactical fouling to prevent counter attacks: by fouling around the halfway line Dynamo’s midfield could get behind the ball to defend. His preferred formation of 4-1-3-2 used to take the shape of 4-3-3 in attack and 5-3-2 in defence. Dynamo’s defending was usually organized as a mixed zonal-and-man-marking system; players would usually defend zonally yet the opposition’s best player was in most cases man-marked by a Dynamo player who tracked him back whenever he went.

Many modern-day managers have been influenced by his management skills. Ralf Ragnick, who once played against Valeriy’s Dynamo Kiev side in late 1980s was influenced a lot by their ‘counter pressing’ tactics which he has tried to emulate in his managerial career over the years. Many other German managers have learned from Ralf Ragnick over the years, most notably Julian Nagelsmann and Thomas Tuchel who have also picked up many traits of the Ukranian managerial style.

Remembrance

Following his death Lobanovskyi was awarded the Hero of Ukraine order, the nation’s highest honour, as well as the UEFA Order of Merit in Ruby. Dynamo Kyiv’s stadium was also renamed the Lobanovsky Stadium in his honour. In 2003, Lobanovskyi was awarded FIFA Order of Merit, the highest honour awarded by FIFA. On 11 May 2003, before the first anniversary of the death of Lobanovskyi, a monument was opened near the Lobanovsky Dynamo Stadium.

After his death, A.C. Milan won the Champions League in 2003 with Andriy Shevchenko in the team. After the victory Shevchenko flew to Kyiv to put his medal by the grave of his former manager. Andriy Shevchenko is himself managing the Ukranian National Team in present day, trying to emulate the teachings of his mentor and Andriy is blessed with arguably the best prospects which can prove to be the “Golden Generation” of the country’s football team post it’s separation from USSR.

Andriy Shevchenko dedicating his UCL victory against Juventus to his ex-coach

Football Around The World: Part 1- Czech Republic

Czech Republic. The moment you hear these 2 words, you get the images of Prague and its clamouring medieval era streets and of course Pavel Nedved, Karel Poborsky, Vladimir Smicer, Petr Cech, Tomas Rosicky, Milan Baros and who can forget the man, the myth, the legend: Antonin Panenka. 

Once the mighty yet underdog nation of Czechoslovakia boasted some of the most technically astute players ever known to man. I will try to cover up how this small nation went against the odds and shocked the footballing giants, suffered political turmoil yet delivered at grandest stages of all. 

Czechoslovakia as a footballing nation reached the finals of 2nd ever FIFA World Cup, losing to the host and eventual winners- Italy. They then again reached the world cup final in 1962, again suffering ignominy of losing at the grandest stage of all; the winner- Pele’s Brazil. But this didn’t stop them from progressing as a footballing nation. A widespread change at grassroot level and one of the first country to involve the use of Sports Science in the game, the country started churning out very good prospects which made the core of the National team for next decade. Spearheaded by the charismatic Antonin Panenka, Czechoslovakia’s team also relied on the rough principles of ‘Total Football’ which was used and mastered by the Dutch in this era, maximizing the use of their technically astute players. The highlight of this era will be the penalty which won the fringe nation their first ever International Trophy- The EUROS. 

The country remained under a Communist rule after the end of World War II. The Communist Party integrated a centralized Sports structure in the country with deep links to Schools, Universities and sporting bodies thus inculcating a strong team ethic, which was evident in their National Team. With the advancement of technology, the government invested a good amount of money in upgrading the facilities at Grassroot level and promoting the use of Sports Science in the game.  

A potential golden generation was on the rise in the 1980s with clubs like Sparta Prague, Slavia Prague, Bohemians 1905, FK Viktoria Plzen, FK Jablonec, FK Mlada Boleslav seeing a rise in the talent coming through the youth ranks. But the “Velvet Revolution” and the collapse of political order in 1989 brought an end to the various sporting schemes which helped the game thrive in the country. A funding gap was created due to this with influx of money decreasing over the years, which saw the outflux of talent from the country. By 2005, only 5 members of National Team were plying their trade in the country’s top tier league competition and rest of the members were making a name for themselves abroad. 

Playing under the new nation of Czech Republic, the so-called exciting prospects took the world by storm in 1996. With the Bosman ruling and its potential game changing impact, a new market opened up for the Czech players to make a mark at club level and EUROS 1996 became a stage to show their talent to the world. The underdogs defied the odds and reached to the finals of the competition and were moments away from getting hands on the coveted trophy but an Oliver Bierhoff double (including a golden goal winner) shattered the dreams of this tiny new nation, losing the match by the score line of 2-1. But this tournament opened up the gates to European club football for many of it’s international players with the change in ruling of Non-European players allowed in squad in many countries after the Bosman ruling. Pavel Nedved joined The Laziali, spearheading the Czech football revolution for many years and making his mark at Lazio and then at Juventus. Karel Poborsky (and his famous “Poborsky Lob”) joined Manchester United, winning a Premier League medal in his 18-month stay at the club, then moving to Benfica, Lazio and finishing his career in Czech Republic. After losing Poborsky to their arch-rivals Manchester United, Liverpool turned their attention to Patrik Berger, who spent 7 glorious years at the Merseyside club, then moving further south and joining The Pompeys, Portsmouth and then Aston Villa before calling it quit on his career in England, moving back to his native country to see out his last few years of the career. 

While the current crop of players made a name for themselves with their performances and winning their dream moves to the Elites, the next batch of youth was brimming on the chance to send shockwaves, in which they succeeded. The U21s of Czech Republic performed very well at U21 Euros, finishing runners up at 2000 edition which was held in Slovakia and winning the competition in 2002, hosted by Switzerland and brought the talent of iconic Petr Cech to the mainstream. Both the editions of competition saw the involvement of many players, who then went to have a good career including the likes of Petr Cech, Milan Baros, Zdenek Grygera, Marek Jankulovski, Jaroslav Drobny, David Rozehnal, Tomas Hubschman, Radoslav Kovac. (Tomas Rosicky was supposed to take part in 2000 edition but he had become a mainstay in senior team by the time qualification rounds for the tournament were over)

Carrying this momentum forward, Czech Republic again gave the European powerhouses a tough fight, reaching the semi-finals of 2004 EUROS, setting up a clash with another underdog team in Greece. Milan Baros’ performances almost took them to another European final but an injury time winner again destroyed the dreams of this tiny nation. An appearance at 2006 World Cup was another highlight for the country but by the turn of the decade, the Golden Generation was in its twilight years and the outflux of talent to neighbouring countries of Germany and Austria curtailed the development of many prospects. 

But with ex-players getting into administration level jobs in the Czech Republic FA, things are turning around. Karel Poborsky himself is the Technical Director, looking after the development of players representing the country at youth levels and creating a good path for them to take the chance to represent Czech Republic at senior level when they are ready; by trying to emulate the same sporting schemes and atmosphere from which their Golden Generation benefitted. 

A country which influenced German and Belgian Football Renaissance is itself going through the same phase and the signs are looking good till now. Exciting prospects like Adam Hlozek, Adam Karabec, Alex Kral, Michal Sadilek, Ondrej Lingr, Ondrej Sasinka, Christian Frydek, Filip Soucek, Dominik Plechaty, Zdenek Hucek, Vojtech Patrak, Matej Polidar have stepped up and made a mark for their hometown teams and for country at Youth Levels too, again attracting the attention of scouts from other parts of Europe.

The process is long but the signs are looking positive and who knows if some of these players finally break their jinx and bring glory for once powerhouse of football. 

Verified by MonsterInsights