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RUSSIAN SQUAD' 2007

 

NEWS

Russia's New Year toast has Dutch flavour

By Gennady Fyodorov

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russians like their heroes homegrown but this New Year's Eve football fans will be toasting two middle-aged Dutchmen.

Guus Hiddink led Russia to the Euro 2008 finals while fellow Dutchman Dick Advocaat steered Zenit St Petersburg to the national title for the first time in nearly a quarter of a century.

He is the first foreign manager to win such an honour in Russia.

The two men's impact on the game in Russia, however, goes well beyond the playing field.

Hiddink, 61, the first foreigner to coach Russia's national team, not only has transformed an often underachieving side into a formidable force, he has brought a European flavour inside the old Iron Curtain.

The charming Dutchman also became an instant media darling, adored for his openness and straight-forward approach as well as his sense of humour.

"It was like a breath of fresh air," said Igor Rabiner, leading soccer columnist at the newspaper Sport-Express.

"And we all needed that after a long procession of sterile personalities who were in charge of the national team for the past decade," he said in reference to former Russian managers.

"In some ways, Hiddink has revolutionised Russian football," said Grant Kasyan, sports editor of the business daily Kommersant, echoing that thought.

Hiddink has even set a fashion trend in Russia.

FAVOURITE DRINK

After he guided Russia into Euro 2008 against seemingly improbable odds, many fans began celebrating the historic achievement not with the customary shots of vodka but with Hiddink's favourite drink, a cup of Italian cappuccino.

Unlike Hiddink, Advocaat, who replaced wildly popular Czech Vlastimil Petrzela midway through the 2006 season, struggled at first to win the support of Zenit fans.

But that all changed this year when he took them to their first league crown since 1984, going one better than his predecessor, who led Zenit to the runners-up spot in his first season in St Petersburg in 2003.

Petrzela was almost a cult figure in St Petersburg, loved by the Zenit media and fans for an attractive if not adventurous brand of football as well as his sharp tongue.

Advocaat said all he wanted was to build a winning team.

"I've never cared much for having a popularity contest. It just doesn't interest me," he told Reuters in an interview shortly after replacing Petrzela.

"I just want to achieve results and win trophies. That would be the best legacy I could have of myself here."

Gradually, he was able to turn things around, instilling order and discipline into Zenit's often impetuous game.


After a fourth-place finish in 2006, Zenit finally made the breakthrough this year, disproving the famous Petrzela saying that they would never win the title competing against the powerful Moscow clubs.

Ironically, this year it was clubs from the capital that often had to complain about refereeing and other outside factors helping Zenit, backed by the seemingly limitless resources of Russian energy giant Gazprom.

LITTLE GENERAL

Advocaat, dubbed the Little General by the Dutch media, remained unperturbed.

"I always let my results do the talking for me," he said in response to complaints by some of his fellow coaches.

The Dutchman, by his own admission, has also finally warmed to Russia's second capital. The new love-affair with the city as well as the title-clinching finish have led Advocaat to extend his Zenit contract.

The 60-year-old, who had previously agreed to coach Australia's national team, last month changed his mind and decided to stay in St Petersburg for another year.

"The lure of playing in the Champions League was just too big to resist. Of course, money was also a factor," said Advocaat, who will reportedly earn over $4.5 million (2.2 million pounds) next year.


The successes of both Hiddink and Advocaat have raised the profile of Dutch coaches to a new height in Russia.

Local papers were full of stories linking several of their countrymen, including former Netherlands manager Louis van Gaal, with a number of top Russian clubs.

Former Dutch captain Ruud Gullit, who now coaches Los Angeles Galaxy, has also expressed interest in coaching in Russia at some point in his career.

"Why not? The Russian league is getting better and better and it seems money is not a problem here," Gullit, 45, told Reuters in an interview earlier this month.

"Besides, I really like Moscow," said the former Chelsea, Newcastle United and Feyenoord manager, who had visited the Russian capital twice in a three-week period.

Today.reuters.co.uk, Dec 31, 2007

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