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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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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Ten Cate will not work under Grant

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Political tensions at Stamford Bridge may be re-emerging. Where once Jose Mourinho’s Portuguese faction faced a Dutch-Danish group headed by Arnesen, it appears there may now be Israeli - as represented by Grant and the agent Pini Zahavi - and Dutch-Danish interests.Chelsea yesterday reissued a statement from Roman Abramovich’s Moscow office that had been released after Mourinho’s departure last month. “Information that Mr Abramovich is preparing to, or already has, offered Guus Hiddink a management post at Chelsea is untrue,” it read. “On the contrary, Mr Abramovich is very pleased the Russian Football Union has offered to renew Mr Hiddink’s contract until 2010.”Hiddink’s agent, Cees van Nieuwenhuizen, refused to comment beyond reiterating that he remained in talks with the Russian federation. One Chelsea insider said that Grant would be the club’s manager “for years to come”.Ten Cate has not been offered a job and no approach has been made to Ajax. It is believed the Dutch club have a succession plan that would see the Holland coach, Marco van Basten, installed. They would not stand in Ten Cate’s way if he left.Sources say Abramovich is determined to ensure Chelsea remain at the top of the English game. “He’ll do whatever it takes to make it work,” said one insider. “He wanted rid of Jose Mourinho because it was all about Jose Mourinho; he’d had enough of that. He knew it would be unpopular but he has never been more determined to make it right: his reputation is at stake.”The way he was celebrating the goals [in the 2-1 win in Valencia] on Wednesday night shows that Chelsea still means the world to him.”

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Ten Cate is still my No1, says Grant

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

Avram Grant is optimistic that Henk Ten Cate is Chelsea-bound despite the Ajax coach’s tactful promise to honour his contract.

The Chelsea boss wants to bring the Dutchman to Stamford Bridge as one of two assistant managers and a deal is expected to be completed in the next two weeks.

Ready to move: Ten Cate Yesterday the two clubs and Ten Cate were all positioning themselves for negotiations.

Ten Cate, who is attracted by a move which would double his 1million salary, claimed he was not about to quit Ajax.

The Dutch club are not too upset at the prospect of losing their manager after crashing out of Europe but won’t admit it because they want compensation to help them land a successor, with Martin Jol and Marco van Basten among the targets.

Chelsea stressed that they have other options if the Ten Cate deal hits a snag or becomes too expensive.

Grant, however, explained why he wants the 52-year-old coach, who has 20 years of coaching and managing experience, culminating in his time as assistant manager at Barcelona and the past year in Amsterdam.

“It is very simple,” said the Chelsea boss. “We are looking for the best. It’s no secret we have lost four from the staff ?one assistant, one fitness coach, one scout and one goalkeeping coach ?and we have checked all the possibilities. It is easier to do it before the season but we are handling the situation very well and we will find them. I want to do it as soon as possible.

“Henk has a very good record as assistant at Barcelona. I have met him, he is a nice person
and I like his style of football. First I decide how I want the team to play and then we look for the right person.”

Grant also insists he wants Steve Clarke to stay as his ‘British’ assistant and promised him
a more integral role on the training pitch because the Israeli rarely leads the sessions, unlike his predecessor Jose Mourinho.

Frank Lampard is expected to return to the Chelsea bench at Bolton tomorrow and Grant sees no reason why he cannot join the England squad next week if he is fit.

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