Maradona: ‘The Head Guy, Which Is Me’
By Jeffrey Marcus"
It’s official: Diego Maradona was handed the reins of the Argentina national team Tuesday in a move that “represents a profound, if not reckless, leap of faith,” according to Dan Rosenheck, writing for The Times. But the peculiar move, which came to light more than a week ago, has the chance to be shockingly ingenious if Argentina can reverse its recent form and, imagine it, play beautiful soccer for “El Diego.”
And if Maradona has taught the world one thing, it is never count him out. His teammate on the 1986 World Cup champions, Jorge Valdano, a far more cerebral player than Maradona, said Argentina’s new coach is “a genetic miracle, a man whom nature endowed with extraordinary abilities and who, moreover, grew up in the right place to achieve his potential.” (Read the entire Q & A with Valdano on the BBC’s Web site; it’s great stuff.)
But will Maradona’s undeniable genius translate into success as a coach?
Rob Hughes asks in the International Herald Tribune: “Do they have that capacity to turn the genie of play, the instinct to thrill and entertain, into a tool to teach and inspire others in their care?”
It’s by no means a guarantee, Hughes reminds us.
“Any number of men have tried to reinvent their success in team management. Alfredo Di Stefano and Ferenc Puskas, the Argentine and the Hungarian who helped make Real Madrid great in the 1950s, had only fleeting and decidedly moderate success as coaches.”
In fact, it’s rare in any sport that the most talented, gifted players become good coaches. More often it is the average player who grows into an effective teacher. Often these players have fewer natural gifts fueling their success as players, and therefore must compensate on the field by being smarter, more mentally astute and analytical. This makes them better coaches later on. Two examples from the basketball world: Pat Riley and Phil Jackson. Both were role players on top teams in the N.B.A. But both men took their experience and court savvy and created fabulously successful coaching careers.
Maradona may be aided by such men. Carlos Bilardo, Maradona’s former coach on the national team, will be the manager. Sergio Batista, a hard-nosed player on the 1986 World Cup team who was less talented than many of his contemporaries, has proven himself as a coach at the youth level, leading Argentina to a second consecutive gold medal in the Olympics. He and Jose Luis Brown were expected to be named assistant coaches. They’d provide a learned and stabilizing influence which could be combined with Maradona’s inspiration.
But the decision on assistants has been held up. The Associated Press reports that Maradona preferred Oscar Ruggeri and his friend Alejandro Mancuso. “We still don’t have it resolved,” Maradona said, according to the A.P. “What we’re looking for with Carlos is that the (new coaching staff) be made of iron, that they’re ready to work and that they will accept orders from the head guy, which is me.”
An Earthly Realm for a Soccer God
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But this month, Diego Maradona, the country’s 48-year-old sporting titan, will try his hand at an all-too-earthly task: coaching Argentina’s men’s national soccer team, which has failed to reach the semifinals of the World Cup since “El Diego” himself starred for it in 1986 and 1990.
After retiring 11 years ago, Maradona has remained in the spotlight primarily as the country’s leading real-life soap opera star, waging a series of well-publicized battles with drugs, obesity, the news media and past lovers. Now, the hopes and dreams of 40 million soccer-mad Argentines will rest on the shoulders — much-slimmed after a stomach-stapling operation in 2005 — of a man who, in the words of the local newspaper columnist Horacio Pagani, will be “the least prepared manager in the history of international soccer.”
Given Argentina’s string of disappointing World Cup performances, the country certainly seems as if it could use a supernatural savior. The team was sent home by Romania in the round of 16 in 1994, by the Netherlands in the quarterfinals in 1998, and by Germany in the quarterfinals in 2006. In 2002, Argentina failed to qualify for the knockout stage.
But handing Maradona the reins represents a profound, if not reckless, leap of faith. His managing résumé is thin and checkered. In 1994 and 1995, he piloted two Argentine club teams to just three wins in 23 games, and he was once forced to call the shots from the stands because a suspension for ephedrine use prevented him from sitting on the bench. Moreover, his personal track record hardly suggests he is fit to keep a 23-man team playing in lockstep. As recently as March 2007, rumors of his death circulated wildly while he was hospitalized for alcohol-related hepatitis.
The controversial selection became official Tuesday, when the executive committee of Argentina’s national soccer federation met. But that group serves as little more than a rubber stamp for the decisions of the organization’s president, Julio Grondona, and his pick of Maradona is considered a fait accompli.
Grondona, who also serves as a vice president of FIFA, the game’s international governing body, is widely thought to run the national sport as a personal fief. During his 29 years in office, he has been accused of using his influence over referees, the news media, and the distribution of revenues to guarantee obedience from the club presidents who elect him — and to advance his business interests. The courts have ordered some 50 searches of his offices during his presidency, but few formal proceedings have ever been filed against him, and he has never been found guilty of a crime.
The leading candidate for the coaching job, which became available after Alfio Basile resigned in October, was Carlos Bianchi. As the manager of Boca Juniors — Argentina’s most popular club, for whom Maradona played from 1981 to 1982 and from 1995 to 1997 — Bianchi won four domestic titles, three continental titles and two intercontinental titles. But his poor relationship with Grondona appears to have disqualified him for the post.
Sergio Batista, who coached Argentina’s under-23 team to the Olympic gold medal in Beijing, was also passed over.
Maradona has, predictably, brushed off concerns about his readiness, noting that he spent two decades on the national team.
“Soccer hasn’t changed,” he told reporters in Argentina. “I don’t think anything will surprise me.”
The choice of Maradona is sure to increase the international profile of the Argentine team, which will probably increase its revenues. Tickets for his first match in charge, on Nov. 19 against Scotland in Glasgow, have sold briskly.
Public opinion, while divided, seems to lean against the choice: an Internet poll conducted by Clarín, Argentina’s largest newspaper, found that 74 percent of nearly 50,000 voters were opposed. Purists were particularly appalled, arguing that Maradona’s indubitable star power was no substitute for the years on the bench accumulated by other candidates, and that his postretirement antics put the country’s image at risk.
“He was a great player, but nothing more,” said Oscar Pereira, a union employee in the stands at a local league game on Friday night.
“We need someone more serious. You see him running around with Hugo Chávez talking about Che Guevara.”
Moreover, accusations of cronyism against Grondona are flying more freely than ever. “Whatever money they make off Maradona, Grondona and his friends will keep it for themselves,” said Raúl Gámez, a former president of the club Vélez Sársfield and one of Grondona’s most outspoken critics.
But Maradona’s stature among Argentines still leaves many believing he deserves a shot — or at the very least, that his all-too-public campaign for the position forced Grondona’s hand.
“We’ve had a lot of experienced managers, and they haven’t always done well,” said Alejandro Fabbri, a broadcaster for the TyC Sports network. “If Maradona wanted the job, he should get it.
“He’s the greatest Argentine player ever. At least they won’t be able to say he never got the chance.”
To compensate for Maradona’s lack of training, Grondona has also appointed a team of veteran tacticians to support Maradona, led by Carlos Bilardo, who managed Maradona on Argentina’s 1986 World Cup championship team. With capable assistants, Maradona’s devotees say, he will be able to focus on providing the players with his special brand of leadership and inspiration.
“He’s the biggest name there is,” said Pereira’s son, Nahuel, who accompanied him to the game. “He’ll pass on some of his magic to them.”
While Argentines disagree over the merits of the decision, they share a concern for Maradona’s well-being in his new role — perhaps a concern greater than their worries about the direction of the team as a whole. Will Maradona the deity survive Maradona the manager?
“I told him he was too big for this job,” Pagani said. “Right now, everyone loves him. Once he starts making decisions for the team, he’ll be held to account. He’s risking his legend. But he said that he wanted to do it.”
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