Another aggravated assault over the weekend has landed a 19 year-old Boise man behind bars.

Monday, June 16th, 2008

By the time Chelsea’s managerial pursuit had officially begun, with the sacking of Avram Grant in May, it appeared that they had limited options to choose from. Sven Goran Eriksson, thought to be Roman Abramovich’s first choice back in 2003 after ‘purely a social meeting’, had already been courting the Mexican FA after being axed by Thaksin Shinawatra. Frank Rijkaard was mentioned, but he hasn’t enjoyed as much success as he did whilst Henk Ten Cate was involved with the coaching at Barca.

Ten Cate is also a man who, ironically, has also just been sacked by Chelsea. Marco van Basten had already signed a contract to take over at Ajax after this summer’s Euro tournament, back in February. Similarly, Jurgen Klinsmann was already in line to replace the retiring Ottmar Hitzfeld at Bayern Munich, a deal that was arranged at the turn of this year. AC Milan claim that Carlo Ancelotti has been pursued by Chelsea, yet would he have even been the right man for the Russian owner so adamant on his footballing investments playing an attacking brand? Ancelotti has come under fire for favouring a defensive style of football, and could well have ended up like Capello under the Madrid regime of you’re out if you win ugly.

You have to give credit where it is due though, and Scolari did mastermind three successive international tournament knock-outs to the English national team. It just strikes me as odd that if you are scouting the Euro internationals for footballing talent, in terms of both players, and managers, then why not go for one of the up and coming coaches who are certain to have successes in front of them given the right opportunities.

In the English leagues stability and success seem synonymous. Look at Manchester United and Sir Alex Ferguson, Arsenal and Arsene Wenger, and even, to a lesser degree, Hereford United and Graham Turner. All at their clubs for 22, 12, and 13 years respectively. Wenger was a little known French coach with experience in the Japanese J League and French Ligue Une, and Ferguson had enjoyed successes in the Scottish Premier division.

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Panathinaikos name ex-Chelsea man as new boss

Monday, June 16th, 2008

Dutchman Henk ten Cate, who was Avram Grant’s right-hand man at Chelsea last season, was named as the new coach of Greek side Panathinaikos on Friday.

“Panathinaikos’ organization, history, ambition and attitude match those of the greatest clubs in Europe, so I’m confident that we will achieve our goals. I’m looking forward to coming to Athens and meeting my players.”

Ten Cate, 54, was assistant manager at Chelsea under Grant last season where the Londoners finished runners-up to Manchester United in the Premier League and the Champions League.

Grant has now been replaced by Brazil’s Luiz Felipe Scolari.

During the 2005-2006 season ten Cate was assistant to Frank Rijkaard at Barcelona which won the Champions League title and the La Liga crown.

Ten Cate was a former player in the Dutch league and briefly had a stint with North American Soccer League side Edmonton Drillers in Canada.

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Chelsea look for hard man to restore order

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Roman Abramovich has told Chelsea’s board to find a managerial hard man to replace the sacked Avram Grant. The club have yet to identify who will become their third manager in nine months, but they have put together a shortlist focusing on renowned disciplinarians, believed to include Guus Hiddink, Luiz Felipe Scolari and Marcello Lippi, with Mark Hughes the home-grown candidate.

Pini Zahavi, who for several years has acted as a buying agent for Chelsea, is pushing the credentials of his friend Sven-G?ran Eriksson, whom Abramovich has attempted to hire on two previous occasions, but the former England manager’s reputation for indulging his players would appear to rule him out this time. Frank Rijkaard and Roberto Mancini, who have won domestic titles with Barcelona and Inter Milan respectively, also fall into this category.

However, the intervention of Abramovich could change that. Hiddink has not signed a two-year contract extension that was agreed with the Russian FA in March and, as a guest at the Champions League final last week, told a packed Luzhniki Stadium in English that he still hoped to work in the Barclays Premier League.

Hiddink is perhaps the only candidate to fulfil all of the criteria that the Chelsea board have been given in their search for a manager. His track record, coaching skills and tactical acumen are impeccable he has taken four countries to leading finals and won the Champions League with PSV Eindhoven as is his English.

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I’ll do it: Rijkaard will quit Barca in summer and is ready for talks with Chelsea

Thursday, March 6th, 2008

Avram Grant came under further pressure last night after sources close to Barcelona coach Frank Rijkaard confirmed that he would consider an offer to manage Chelsea.

Sportsmail revealed Chelsea’s interest in Rijkaard last October and yesterday the word was that he will quit Barca at the end of the season.

Bridge building: Rijkaard during a Champions League game at Chelsea in 2006

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Grant ’snubbed’ by players

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

Once the players had concluded their gathering, they again proved uncooperative. Seeking to end reports of squad discontent at his handling of the final, Grant asked the players to voice any concerns. It is understood that because they were worried that what they said would be relayed to owner Roman Abramovich, no team member spoke up.Grant had been called in to Cobham the previous day when Abramovich demanded talks with the first team’s entire coaching staff. Unprecedented in the past four seasons at Chelsea, the Russian’s request resulted in Grant cancelling an arrangement with the Israel Football Federation to study for the Uefa Pro-Licence he must obtain to continue managing the team next season.Abramovich had also spent a significant length of time in the Chelsea dressing room at Wembley after Sunday’s 2-1 defeat, been present for each of the team’s final three training days before the final and held private discussions with Grant on the eve of the game.There remains considerable discontent among the Chelsea squad about preparations for the final. Having witnessed Abramovich address Michael Essien about errors in his play after a Champions League group game this season, some players believe the owner influences team selection and strategy through his deputy Eugene Tenenbaum. Grant partially denied this on Friday, saying: ‘Roman Abramovich has never even seen me about one player that he needs to play, never said to me anything about picking the team.’Whoever did choose Sunday’s team and tactics, the players were unhappy that they did not know who they would be playing alongside nor which formation they would be using until the day of the game. Ashley Cole learned of his omission in the pages of a national newspaper, Michael Ballack believed he was to start only to be supplanted by Shaun Wright-Phillips, while Alex was asked if he would stand down for John Terry on the Saturday. ‘It was frustrating,’ Alex told Brazilian television last week. ‘The boss called me over to talk on Saturday. He told me that I’d been playing well, but it’s the English cup and that Terry is the captain, he has to play. He asked me if there was any problem and I said, “No, no problem at all. I’m here to do my job.”‘From Thursday onwards, senior players had asked whether the team would be playing in their customary 4…#8209;3…#8209;3 formation or another shape to accommodate the selection of Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka as joint strikers for the first time. They were told to ‘wait and see’ and ‘not to worry’ about the issue.Adding to the tension was Terry’s nervousness over being passed over for the in-form Alex. During Saturday’s final training session the captain’s unease spilled over into a fight with Henk ten Cate, ostensibly over the assistant coach’s whistle-happy interruptions of a practice match to chide midfielder John Obi Mikel. Terry was not reassured of his place until 11pm on Saturday night.Grant’s job is not in immediate jeopardy. Abramovich has too much invested in the appointment of an under-qualified coach to one of European football’s top positions to dispense with him after one Wembley defeat. Sources close to the owner insist he has not moved to change the manager nor sanctioned any approach to the Barcelona coach Frank Rijkaard.An uneasy atmosphere does remain at the club, though. Piet de Visser, who acts as a private adviser to Abramovich on football matters, is an important influence, having recommended several player purchases and the appointment of chief scout Frank Arnesen. Grant’s relationship with Arnesen is described as ‘frosty’.Chelsea last night denied that players arrived late for Tuesday’s meeting with Grant. They declined to comment on when Ashley Cole and Ballack discovered they were not in the cup final line-up.

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Quiet man at the centre of Barcelona’s revival

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

As the bus trundled down the Avenida Diagonal, one man was absent from the top deck: Frank Rijkaard. While his players celebrated, he sat in the gloom below, silently puffing on a cigarette. On the way back from clinching the title at Valencia, Bar%26ccedil;a’s president, Joan Laporta, had raised the Dutchman’s arm aloft, like a boxer, as they arrived in the departure lounge. The coach simply looked down, pulled his hand free and hurried through passport control.It was typical Rijkaard. Since taking over in 2003, he has stood out by not standing out at all, the quiet man at the centre of Barcelona’s revival. If Roman Abramovich wants a low-profile coach, Rijkaard slips under the radar entirely. What made Rijkaard’s spats with Jose Mourinho so notable was not the way he reacted but that he reacted at all.One of Rijkaard’s charges in the Holland team defines him in three words: cool under pressure. “Frank speaks so quietly you have to strain to hear him,” says Ronaldinho. “The best thing about the mister,” adds Puyol, “is that he is very calm.” Rijkaard admits his first task on taking over was to make the players feel “protected and relaxed”.At Barcelona that is easier said than done. It is not just about managing the team but managing the whole entourage. “The key to our success is the calmness Rijkaard transmits to everyone,” says Laporta. Privately, those close to Rijkaard say the pressure has taken its toll, though rarely has it surfaced publicly. He is widely liked, never seeks conflict Mourinho-style and rarely responds to barbed questions or even the most bitter of accusations. Rijkaard could hardly be more different from the former coach Louis van Gaal. But it worked. Although only the third choice, behind Guus Hiddink and Ronald Koeman, Rijkaard joined a club that had not won the league in five years and lurched from crisis to crisis. At Christmas 2003 Bar%26ccedil;a were 12th, 18 points behind Real Madrid and humiliated 5-0 at M%26aacute;laga.But Rijkaard did not panic and neither did the club. Nine successive wins began a run in which they overhauled Real to finish second to Valencia. The following season, with Eto’o and Deco joining, they won the title, repeated the success the following year and added the European Cup by beating Arsenal in Paris.It was all done with wonderful football. Schooled at Ajax, and a disciple of Total Football, Rijkaard is adamant about “keeping the game open”. He adopted a 4-3-3 formation that allowed a catalogue of creative stars to complement each other. Winning games and winning over people, here was the footballing nirvana that Roman Abramovich believed he could not achieve with Mourinho.”He gives us freedom and doesn’t always pressure us,” said Puyol. But what was meant as a compliment soon became a criticism. Rijkaard’s relaxed nature came to be judged as passivity. Critics who lauded his paternalism in victory attacked his weakness in defeat. Rijkaard had, after all, allowed Ronaldinho to miss more than half of last season’s training yet still refused to drop him, even as he became clearly overweight. Rijkaard’s sessions, though, were dismissed as short, lacking intensity, and with no tactical work at all.With Henk Ten Cate moving to Chelsea, Rijkaard appeared to have lost the hard man he needed to make his routine succeed. Some urged Rijkaard to get tough and he took some measures, including dropping Ronaldinho for the first time ever last month, but adopting a harder attitude would not wash and he was not false enough to try it. It was not that he made wrong decisions; he made no decisions at all. The balancing act did not work either. Rijkaard’s ability to maintain harmony blew up in his face when Eto’o launched a furious harangue on Ronaldinho and referred to the coach as a “bad person”. Rijkaard showed no reaction.Packed with talent and blessed with a huge lead, Bar%26ccedil;a contrived to throw away last year’s league title. Divided, lacking tactical rigour or fitness, they appeared to have gone down the gal%26aacute;ctico route. This year’s poor start has only reinforced that belief. Suddenly the call is for another kind of coach, an iron man in the Mourinho fashion; just as Mourinho’s former employers are looking for a coach cut from a different cloth.Rijkaard’s recordAs a player1980 Made senior debut aged 17 for Ajax under Leo Beenhakker1982 Won championship with Ajax, the first of three titles in his first spell at the club1987 Fell out with Johan Cruyff, eventually going out on loan to Real Zaragoza before moving to Milan where he achieved legendary status1988 Arrigo Sacchi converted him from central defender to world-class midfielder in a side with Marco van Basten and Ruud Gullit who won the European Cup twice and Serie A title twice. As an international won Euro 88 and a semi-finalist in 1992As a manager2000 Despite inexperience as a manager, he guided Holland to the Euro 2000 semi-finals2003 After a difficult start he turned around Barcelona’s fortunes. They finished runners-up in first season before winning La Liga twice2006 Won Champions League, beating Arsenal in the final

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The Grant effect: a bright new start or more of the same?

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Of course such comments could be aimed at rattling his opponent: the kind of barb most managers aim at their adversaries before important matches. It could also be motivated by Curbishley’s trade unionist’s instinct as a leading member of the League Managers’ Association, railing against a man perceived to have undermined Mourinho before taking his job.But take up Curbishley’s challenge to examine how Grant has gone about his work behind the scenes and it is clear that care has been taken to ensure that as much as possible of what the Portuguese put in place is preserved. When Mourinho left he took with him one of his assistant managers, Baltemar Brito; his conditioning coach, Rui Faria; his chief scout, Andre Villas Boas; and his goalkeeping coach, Silvinho Louro.When Grant stepped in to Mourinho’s shoes he had the continuity of Steve Clarke as assistant manager and new men were hired for old roles. In came Michael Emenalo, a former Nigeria international who has stayed in touch with Grant since a shared spell at Maccabi Tel Aviv. Then there was Henk Ten Cate, Frank Rijkaard’s European Cup-winning assistant at Barcelona who quit his post as Ajax manager to become Grant’s assistant. Mick McGiven, the former reserve-team manager, was promoted to match observer scout and charged with checking out opposition teams in a role previously occupied by Villas Boas.”Basically it’s been people filling in the roles from the void left by what there was before,” said one dressing-room source. “There was a foreign coach and a British coach and that’s what there is now. Everyone’s just filled in the positions vacated by Mourinho’s people. And it’s the same style of people.”So for the quiet but occasionally abrasive Brito there is now the combustible Ten Cate. McGiven takes his computer where the Championship Manager-addicted Boas once went and Emenalo is, like Faria, the trusted lieutenant who might be called upon to act suspiciously under a big woolly hat if ever his manager is given a touchline ban.There is nothing wrong with adopting the Portuguese prototype that has fostered so much success. But how much influence does the man at the top really have for his reported %26pound;2.8m-a-year contract? Marcel Desailly, the former Chelsea captain who remains intimately connected with some in the Chelsea dressing room, believes the answer is very little.”He is lucky that he has such professional players,” said Desailly when asked for his opinion as a Match Of The Day pundit. “The players said to themselves, wasn’t it beautiful when we were winning everything? Come on, let us do this again.”The one area where Grant drew applause from Desailly was in having done away with the divisive “untouchables” policy to which Mourinho previously clung and it is something that those who know Grant expected. Ronen Harazi, a former Israel player who declares himself a Grant admirer, says that the Chelsea manager is a “master psychologist - he makes every player feel like they are the best in the world”.But it is debatable whether that kind of deft touch is necessary in Chelsea’s dressing room, which is dominated by English players who have apparently bullet-proof self-belief - confidence that led to some reportedly engaging in extreme excesses of drunkenness at Shaun Wright-Phillips’s birthday celebrations last month.And besides, one club insider tells the story differently. “I don’t know what Grant does,” said the source. “He doesn’t take the training sessions, Ten Cate and Clarke do that. There’s no patterns to the teams he’s picked: one minute Shaun plays and he’s man of the match, the next he’s dropped and not even on the bench.”All this about him being a psychologist and having the best man-management is rubbish too. He never spoke to Shaun when he dropped him. He asked Steve Clarke to tell Tal Ben Haim he was going to drop him - he wouldn’t do it himself because they are from the same country and he said it would be better if it comes from somebody else.”I believe he thinks that if he plays everybody, everybody will be happy. It’s early days at the moment and the players are getting on with it, but one day that will be a problem.”Results should, of course, be the guide. But for all his team’s victories, at the moment Grant cannot win.

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Tuesday’s rumours

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

But no. The Mill saw the light. The Daily Mail’s problem pages revealed how Roman Abramovich has wandering eyes and can’t help flirting with Dutch lovelies. Frank Rijkaard is the latest stunner thought to be on Chelsea’s never-ending shopping list. With the imminent arrival of Henk ten Cate from Ajax, it was assumed that Roman would bring in Guus Hiddink, but the Mill reads that Ajax striker Klaas-Jan Hunterlaar will be dragged into the Stamford Bridge vortex of doom, followed by Barcelona-based supermodel Rijkaard in the summer. One onlooker, who wasn’t there, is thought not to have said: “They couldn’t keep their hands off each other. They looked so in love.”The Mirror’s agony uncles report that heartbroken Martin Jol has found out that - as Barry White once said - love is really a hurting thing. Big Marty Jol wanted to walk out on ungrateful spouse Spurs and straight into the arms of Ajax, but his dreams of a place in the sun were gazumped when Ajax appointed their youth team coach instead.Staying with White Heartbreak Lane, the Super Soaraway says Russian captain Andrei Arshavin could be on his way to London for a stormy fling with the Lillywhites. Talks have begun with the right-sided midfielder from Zenit St Petersburg who led his country against England last month, after which he said of potential love-interest Paul Robinson: “England do not have normal keepers. Robinson is not the strongest representative of his profession.”Dear Deirdre, I like to call my own penis “the Hulk”. Am I normal? writes JD (The Bench, White Hart Lane). And yet again from the house of pain, the Express are claiming Sven-Goran Eriksson wants occasional England scamperer and trousersnake-namer Jermain Defoe to move to Manchester City. Sven, not shy of a little roleplay himself, will try to bring Defoe to Eastlands in the January transfer window for %26#163;12m.”I am a rich, successful and handsome man but my demanding nature keeps putting potential partners off. I’ve had a series of short and stormy relationships, but I’m so impatient that if I don’t get exactly what I want, I dump them and just pick up someone else.” No, not the Mill writing about itself (though it might as well be). The Express say Simon Jordan is about to appoint Neil Warnock as the successor to Peter Taylor as manager at Selhurst Park.And for a few “Lite Bites”(TM), Sheffield United and Wolves are vying for the signature of Manchester United midfielder Darren Gibson. The 19-year-old, who decided to play for the Republic rather than Northern Ireland, is on loan at the Blades, but Mick McCarthy wants to lure Gibson away by leaving a trail of dolly mixtures from the car park at Bramall Lane to his office at Molineux. Aston Villa hope to complete the deal this week for Togo midfielder Moustapha Salifou, who is still waiting for international clearance.

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Jol on Ajax alert as Ten Cate flies into Chelsea

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Jol has been courted by Ajax before, during his time at White Hart Lane. Holland’s biggest club came calling in February, 2005 only for Jol to rebuff their advances, saying that he owed a debt to Frank Arnesen, who was then Tottenham’s sporting director. Ironically, Arnesen agreed to join Chelsea that summer, as their head of youth development.Tottenham have endured an horrendous start to the season, with results and the board of directors conspiring against Jol. Daniel Levy, the chairman, led a delegation to Spain to visit Juande Ramos, the Sevilla coach, with a view to installing him as Jol’s successor. The move foundered and Jol has remained, rather uncomfortably, in the position since. Tottenham also made overtures to Jose Mourinho, following his departure from Chelsea three weeks ago.Jol could yet be offered the opportunity to leave on his terms, although his club said last night that they had heard nothing from Ajax. “Tottenham have not received any approach from Ajax with regard to the manager Martin Jol,” said a spokesman.The Dutch Football Federation refuse to consider the release of Van Basten, ahead of next summer’s European Championships, where Holland will be well fancied, and they dismissed the notion of Van Basten combining both jobs for the remainder of the season. Van Basten’s contract expires after the finals in Austria and Switzerland.”Even for %26euro;100m, we will not accept it [that van Basten coaches Ajax],” said Henk Kesler, the federation’s president. “The coach cannot do two things at once.”Ten Cate, who flew into London last night to finalise his move, has had a difficult season. His Ajax team fell short of the lucrative Champions League group stages, losing in the final qualifying round to Slavia Prague and, last Thursday, they went out of the Uefa Cup, on away goals to Dinamo Zagreb. Prior to that, Ten Cate, who had nine months of contract remaining, held talks with Chelsea, to the dismay of Ajax, and they felt that they had no option but to sanction his release.During Sunday’s 2-2 draw at Sparta Rotterdam, Ajax supporters aimed abuse at Ten Cate, the club chairman John Jaakke and the defender Jurgen Colin. Regular chants of “Henkie, get lost and take Jaakke and Colin with you” rang around the away end as Ajax struggled to gain a point. “Henk wanted to go to Chelsea, he was very clear about that,” said Van Geel. “So we didn’t really have a choice about it. He put it to us as a fact and we didn’t want to work with a coach who was at Chelsea in his mind. It should have been done differently but we cannot change it any more. It was not perfect timing.”Ten Cate served as assistant coach to his compatriot Frank Rijkaard at the Spanish club Barcelona before electing to strike out on his own at Ajax last season. He won the Dutch Cup and the Dutch Super Cup but has found the lure of Chelsea and working in the Premier League impossible to resist.He will work under the manager Avram Grant, Mourinho’s successor, and, it is intended, alongside Steve Clarke on the training field. Grant has always worked with two assistants and confirmed last Friday that he wanted a European coach to work with Clarke. Clarke was upset at the manner of Mourinho’s departure and has considered his position but John Terry, the captain, hopes that he can stay.”It is very important to have someone like Clarkey around,” said Terry. “He knows the club inside out, he is passionate for the club and when he speaks, it is from the heart. That is very important not only for the English boys but for the foreign lads who have not been here too long. Hopefully, we can keep hold of him.”

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Ten Cate arrives to put a bit of Bar鏰 into Chelsea

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Ten Cate, as befits a Dutch coach, is an advocate of attacking football and once said: “Nearly everybody played 4-3-3 when I started out so I was pretty much raised in that offensive system and thinking. I have always played [and coached] at clubs that played attractive football and did not depend on brute force.”The Dutchman is on his way to join Chelsea as an assistant coach despite having a torrid time at Ajax at the moment. Fan frustration boiled over during Sunday’s 2-2 draw at Sparta Rotterdam when supporters aimed abuse at Ten Cate, the club chairman John Jaakke and the defender Jurgen Colin. Regular chants of “Henkie, get lost and take Jaakke and Colin with you” rang around the away end as Ajax struggled to gain a point in the league game.The Ajax supporters’ frustration, however, does not mean that Chelsea are making a mistake. At Barcelona, under Frank Rijkaard, he was an ideal No2, improving players in training and fine-tuning their attacking instincts. He also allowed Rijkaard to keep his “good guy” image with the players. It was often Ten Cate who had to tell players that they were dropped or that they were not being offered a new contract. At half-time it was Ten Cate who ranted or raved if Bar鏰 were behind.The 52-year-old has also had success as a first-team coach in what can only be described as a remarkable and nomadic career. He rarely rose above the average during a playing CV which saw him represent Vitesse, Go Ahead Eagles, Edmonton Drillers, Telstar and Heracles, but he has a reputation as a coach who drastically improves players and works miracles with smaller teams.After gaining experience with Go Ahead Eagles, SC Heracles and the amateur club Rheden, he led Sparta Rotterdam to sixth place in the Eredivisie and also took them to the Dutch cup final, where they lost 5-2 to PSV Eindhoven. Later, at Vitesse, he surprised everyone by finishing third in the league - their highest ever position.He has coached in Hungary and Germany as well, and managed to win the Hungarian Cup with MTK Hungaria despite living in a small flat without his family and the fact that he was often racially abused (he was born in Amsterdam to a Surinamese mother).More success followed back in the Netherlands with NAC Breda - whom he qualified for the Uefa Cup for the first time ever and then, of course, at Barcelona as Rijkaard’s assistant.There is, however, always the danger that his temper will boil over. He had to leave Vitesse after television cameras caught him completely losing the plot following a Uefa Cup game against Sporting Braga. He had to be calmed down by the president, Karel Aalbers, and the technical director, Leo Beenhakker, and that high-profile incident contributed to his departure for KFC Uerdingen in Germany.He is not afraid to make unpopular decisions and Jan Luijkx, a backroom staff member at NAC Breda, said after being fired by Ten Cate: “Ten Cate manages to kick up a row every day, and not only with me. He treats people with contempt and always blames someone else.”At Barcelona, however, he prospered. Ten Cate and Rijkaard both have Surinam roots and knew each other from growing up in Amsterdam. Rijkaard was always going to be the club’s face towards the outside world because of his past as a player but Ten Cate has often been credited as the architect of the successful team that won the Champions League in 2006.The lure of coaching Ajax back in Amsterdam, however, proved too difficult to resist after that Champions League triumph in Paris against Arsenal but his tenure there has been disappointing, especially in Europe. He has failed to reach the Champions League group stages in two consecutive seasons, falling to FC Copenhagen and Slavia Prague in the third qualifying round, and his misery was completed last week when Ajax were also eliminated from the Uefa Cup against Dynamo Zagreb.The coach was not helped by Ajax’s decision to sell Wesley Sneijder to Real Madrid and Ryan Babel to Liverpool in the summer but the problems at the club have reinforced the view that he is an extremely good No2 but perhaps not suited to lead a big club. In London he will arrive in an ideal position: he can work with the players on the training pitch and improve the team’s attacking play, instilling a pattern which will see Chelsea score far more goals than they have so far this season.In the Netherlands he is not seen as a genius such as Guus Hiddink or Johan Cruyff, partly because he did not have a good playing career. He is an emotional character who seems to be better suited away from the limelight than in it. Daan Schippers is deputy editor at the Dutch football magazine ElfRoad to the BridgeFebruary 1990Given his first coaching job at Go Ahead Eagles, where he also playedMay 1995Reaches Dutch Cup final with Sparta Rotterdam but loses 5-2 to PSVMay 1998Finishes third in Dutch league with Vitesse, their highest position everMay 2000Wins his first trophy by leading MTK Hungaria to the Hungarian CupMay 2003Takes NAC Breda into the Uefa Cup for the first time in the club’s historyMay 2006Wins the Spanish league title and the Champions League as Barcelona assistant coach with Ronaldinho and co beating Arsenal 2-1 in the final in Paris

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