Dick Advocaat - Iran Should Forget 'Unrealistic' Big-Name Foreign Coaches

ibrahim

Bench Warmer
Oct 20, 2002
1,881
0
Sydney
#1
The Little General has come out in support of his former assistant...

By Jan Roelfs

Apr 13, 2010 2:09:00 AM

Former Netherlands coach Dick Advocaat has told the Iranian Football Federation (IFF) that they should shelve plans to hire a big-name foreign coach and focus on supporting incumbent Afshin Ghotbi.
Ghotbi, assistant to the Dutchman during his 2005-06 spell in charge of South Korea, has been Iran’s coach for a year.
A number of reports have filtered out of Tehran of late suggesting that certain members of the Iranian Football Federation (IFF) are looking to hire a big-name foreign coach to take the team to the 2011 Asian Cup.
Recent names mentioned have included Sven Goran Eriksson and Ruud Gullit.
“First of all none of the international top coaches would be interested working in Tehran at this moment,” Advocaat said.
“People in Iran who are mentioning names like Eriksson or Gullit have no clue about the opportunities coaches of that standard have. They have no idea about the standards of top international football."
“Second, these European top coaches get very good offers almost every week. If I look at myself, I get also offers from clubs and countries but at this stage in my career I don’t look first to the financial side but to the challenge and work situation. And don’t forget, Iran will not play at the World Cup and for international top coaches the Asian Cup is not big enough outside Asia.”
For the former PSV Eindhoven, Rangers and Zenit St Petersburg boss, Iran need to stick with Ghotbi.
‘Well, if you ask me about the qualities of Afshin Ghotbi I say that he has a great future in international top football. And he is the right man for Iran at this moment. They cannot wish for a better coach. Ghotbi is very ambitious, knows his way around in international football, he has contacts all over the world. Ghotbi definitely can bring Iran to a higher level."

Iran Need To Support This Man Says Advocaat

“Iran needs stability as a football country. A coach needs support from the federation and all the football people in the country, so he can build something up.”

Advocaat, who now is in charge of both the Belgian national team and Dutch club AZ Alkmaar, continued.

“I have heard that they want to spend millions on an older more experienced coach. Well my strongest advice should be to invest money in Ghotbi and his technical staff. Spend money on good physical therapists, good training camps, good opponents for friendly matches. Spend money on a good national training facility. And we need to see Iran more in Europe with friendly matches because they can only become better when they play stronger teams. And these teams are, with all respect, not in Asia but in Europe.” "There are not that many coaches in Asia with Ghotbi's experience. Besides this, Ghotbi was of great help and influence as an assistant coach with Korea during the World Cup in Germany in 2006. To be honest at that time he was already too good to be an assistant coach… I would not like to play Ghotbi as my opponent, because I know how precise and detailed he is in coaching.”
 

Chinaski

Elite Member
Jun 14, 2005
12,269
352
#10

“First of all none of the international top coaches would be interested working in Tehran at this moment,” Advocaat said.
“People in Iran who are mentioning names like Eriksson or Gullit have no clue about the opportunities coaches of that standard have. They have no idea about the standards of top international football."
“Second, these European top coaches get very good offers almost every week. If I look at myself, I get also offers from clubs and countries but at this stage in my career I don’t look first to the financial side but to the challenge and work situation. And don’t forget, Iran will not play at the World Cup and for international top coaches the Asian Cup is not big enough outside Asia.”


Precisely true words directed to all those gonde gooz iranian fans and officials who traditionally have problems to evaluate themselves and recognize the reality going on around them. Hichvaght taraghe ham naboodim, hanooz fekr mikonim atomim.
 
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eerooni

Bench Warmer
Nov 9, 2002
1,996
1
Toronto
#11
:iagree:
"Spend money on good physical therapists, good training camps, good opponents for friendly matches. Spend money on a good national training facility. And we need to see Iran more in Europe with friendly matches because they can only become better when they play stronger teams. And these teams are, with all respect, not in Asia but in Europe."


Absolutely TRUE!!!! IFF needs to spend money on Iranian football infrastructure!
 

ME

Elite Member
Nov 2, 2002
5,904
435
#15
BS!
- We don't need a good coach for the WC, true, but we need one to go to the next one!
- Asian cup is not big, true, but we have not won it in 34 years now, and countries like SA won it even when their football was minor (early 80s) only when they hired qualified coaches.
- Good coaches have a lot of offers, true, but money talks! If big Phil goes to The Boratland, why not someone to Iran.
-Iran is not the best place for a foreign coach to be, true, but coaches with high caliber such as Blazevich and Ivich came to Iran in recent years and made a difference.
-We need investment in national team camps and friendlies, true, but this is not mutually exclusive to spend a few million dollars on a good coach. We shall ask Dick to check out the price of a 100m^2 appartment in Tehran.
--Afshin Ghotbi is a good caoch, not true=BS, if he was, why he couldn't get a job outside Iran as headcoach? :chase:
 

kasra

Bench Warmer
Oct 18, 2002
1,940
6
#16
Dick can suck on it for all I care. Ghotbi was very lucky that Heydari scored the winning goal on the 94th minute of the last game of the season. He also was very lucky that Ali Daei sucked big time as a coach. It is a true example of "being at the right place at the right time." Of course, his phenomenal KHAYE MALI skills are not to go unrecognized.
 
Sep 25, 2005
2,966
0
#19
the approval of one of the best coaches in the world is still not enough for you guys?!

how about if hiddink comes out in support aswell, would you like that, or would you start trashing guus aswell?!
 

Foo

Elite Member
Feb 12, 2006
11,907
5
35
Den Haag, Holland
#20
Advocaat didn't get sacked, he resigned himself. He became coach of Belgium in the summer, and was supposed to lead them to Euro 2012. But he received an offer from Russia, with whom he saw more opportunities (and most importantly, more cash), and resigned after half a year or something. He confirmed today he'll be coach of Russia.