Luiz Felipe Scolari traces his success all the way back to breakthrough spell in Saudi Arabia

Luiz Felipe took charge of Al-Shabab and Al-Ahli before rising to fame with spells in charge of Brazil, Portugal and Chelsea. (Getty)
Updated 15 April 2018
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Luiz Felipe Scolari traces his success all the way back to breakthrough spell in Saudi Arabia

  • 'I owe a lot to Saudi Arabia because it was the first country that gave me the opportunity to be a coach abroad'
  • Former Brazil boss believes the Green Falcons need to get at least a draw in first World Cup game

After a 35-year coaching career that has included jobs in eight countries, Luiz Felipe Scolari has an eclectic and unmatched trophy cabinet.
He has won the World Cup with Brazil, the Gulf Cup with Kuwait, the Copa Libertadores with Gremio and Palmeiras and the Asian Champions League with Guangzhou Evergrande, not to mention 21 other titles. No other manager has enjoyed such success around the globe at both international and domestic level. And the Brazilian credits much of his career success to Saudi Arabia.
It was in 1984, while Scolari was still wet behind the ears as coach of lowly Brasil de Pelotas in Rio Grande do Sul, that he received an invitation to the Kingdom from his friend and managerial journeyman Rubens Minelli. Minelli had enjoyed spells at the helm of Al-Hilal and the Saudi Arabia national team and had suggested to officials at Riyadh’s Al-Shabab club that there was a former physical education teacher showing managerial promise back in Brazil. 
Scolari met the club and was offered the role of head coach, propelling him on a journey that would eventually see him coaching in places as far-flung as Uzbekistan and China. 
While his spell in the Saudi Arabian capital lasted little more than two years, he led Al-Shabab to second in the league before going back to Pelotas. He returned to the region in 1989 as coach of Al-Qadisiya and victory in the Kuwait Emir Cup was enough to see him given the responsibility of leading the host nation at the 1990 Gulf Cup in Kuwait. Although he would win it, by the end of the following year he was back in Saudi Arabia as manager of Al-Ahli in Jeddah.
“If I am anybody today as a football coach I owe a lot to Saudi Arabia because it was the first country that gave me the opportunity to be a coach abroad; the first country that gave me a sense of what it’s like to leave Brazil and work outside,” Scolari told Arab News during an exclusive interview on the sidelines of the Bilbao International Football Summit.
“We did a good job at Al-Shabab, then I went back a few years later to Al-Ahli, where we also did a wonderful job. Arab football enjoyed a better phase than it does today because it had great Brazilian coaches and other foreign coaches from all over the world. It was a very big evolution for the game there and I am proud to have been a part of that. For this, I am always grateful and always speak in a very grateful way in regard to my time there.”
It was only after returning to Brazil that Scolari’s career trajectory shot skywards. In three years at Grêmio, he won six titles including the club’s first Brazilian championship in 15 years as well as the 1995 Copa Libertadores. He replicated his success on the continent four years later with Palmeiras and was the obvious candidate to get the best out of Ronaldo, Rivaldo and Ronaldinho as coach of Brazil during their successful World Cup campaign in 2002.
Trying to rekindle an old love is, however, a difficult and risky affair. After spells at Portugal, Chelsea, Bunyodkor and Palmeiras, when Brazil approached Scolari to lead them at the 2014 World Cup — their first tournament on home soil since 1950 — he readily accepted. It would come close to ruining his reputation. 
Under immense pressure from an expectant public, Scolari sat in the dugout inside a sold-out Estádio Mineirão watching as his side were humiliated 7-1 by Germany in the semifinals. He called it “the worst day of my life” and worldwide ridicule followed. As well as deep-rooted infrastructural problems in the Brazilian football association, it was widely acknowledged that home advantage had turned negative. With passions running high, players had lost their composure.
Scolari is characteristically bullish whenever the subject is brought up — which it always is. “You journalists,” he said, shaking his head. “How many times have Brazil reached the World Cup semifinals since 2002? Only once, just that one time. 
“In my career, I had 95 percent good things and 5 percent bad things. I prefer to look at the good things, but a lot of people prefer to look at the bad. My life continued after 7-1, but for a lot of people it stopped with that game.”
As coach of the host nation at the previous World Cup, Scolari is well positioned to comment on what awaits Russia this summer. The hosts of the 2018 event will kick it off on June 14 against Saudi Arabia. Unlike in 2014 when Brazil were ranked third in the world and played against a Croatia side filled with players from Europe’s top leagues, Russia are the second-lowest ranked team at this year’s competition at No. 66 — four places above Saudi Arabia at No. 70. Neither team has what can be regarded as a star player. 
“It’s the opening match and everyone expects Russia to be organized and wonderful on the pitch, but often that does not happen,” said Scolari, whose Brazil side went a goal behind to Croatia before recovering to win 3-1.
“The most important match of the group stage is the first game and the tension will be massive. If Saudi Arabia know how to work this situation well, they can complicate things a lot for the hosts.
“The pressure is much greater for Russia because the home fans expect the national team to play very well, so they are going to try to pressure their opponents from the start to try and get their fans on their feet. Saudi though, will be in a position to control the game.”
Scolari said he has watched the Green Falcons occasionally in the past few months and believes them capable of “withstanding Russian pressure,” although if Juan Antonio Pizzi’s side are to qualify to the knockout stage, he added, they must avoid defeat in Moscow. 
“For me, in this group, the strongest to qualify are Uruguay and then Russia, for being the host country,” he said, leaning back in his seat.
“If Saudi Arabia can get through that first game with at least a draw, they can approach the second game against Uruguay knowing no matter what happens they will be alive until the final round. Then when they reach that third match against Egypt, you’re looking at an Arab ‘clásico’ so anything can happen.
“Saudi can get a good result, but it will be difficult. To qualify for the second phase of a World Cup, you have to play for every point. For example, at Euro 2016, Portugal qualified with three draws, so at a World Cup sometimes the small details can decide a place in the last 16.”
Scolari, meanwhile, will be watching from afar, pondering his next step after three successful seasons in China in which he won seven titles in three seasons with Guangzhou Evergrande, including the AFC Champions League.
Unsurprisingly, he has offers. And for a man who revealed in 2008 that he was accepting a lucrative offer from Chelsea because “I don’t want to work as a coach until I’m 70,” he gives no hint of calling it a day quite yet. 
“I have open doors in many places,” said Scolari, 69.
“United Arab Emirates, China … I even had a proposal to train a team in the English Championship. I do not mind training a team in a second division, so long as the project is good. I just want a good project next.”
Polishing his considerable silverware will likely not suffice.


Pacers pummel Knicks to stay alive in NBA playoffs

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Pacers pummel Knicks to stay alive in NBA playoffs

  • On the brink of elimination after an embarrassing game five defeat in New York, the Pacers played with desperate aggression
LOS ANGELES: The Indiana Pacers produced another big win on their home court Friday, routing the New York Knicks 116-103 to force a decisive game seven in their NBA Eastern Conference semifinal series.
Pascal Siakam scored 25 points to lead Indiana’s scoring. Tyrese Haliburton added 15 with nine assists and Myles Turner had 17 points as six Pacers players scored in double figures.
On the brink of elimination after an embarrassing game five defeat in New York, the Pacers played with desperate aggression, out-scoring the Knicks 62-38 in the paint and winning the rebounding battle.
They hustled after loose balls, blocked eight shots and handed out 35 assists to keep their offense firing, and kept Knicks talisman Jalen Brunson in check for much of the night as they improved to 6-0 at home in this post-season.
They’ll have to follow up on the road, however, if they want to book a clash with the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference finals, with the Knicks hosting game seven on Sunday at Madison Square Garden.
“Now it’s a one game series, and it’s for all the marbles,” Haliburton said. “Where better to have a game seven than the Garden?
“No team’s won a game on the road in this series, so we’ve got to be ready to go from start to finish in 48 minutes.”
The Pacers broke open a close game with a 17-2 scoring run that pushed their lead to 13 points late in the second quarter.
Donte DiVincenzo stopped the rot for New York, draining a three-pointer from the corner that cut the Pacers’ lead to 10, 61-51, at halftime.
Brunson was limited to five points on 2-of-13 shooting in the first half. He found his range after the break, scoring 14 points in the third and finishing with 31.
Miles McBride added 20 for the Knicks, whose brief surge to open the third quarter was quickly squelched by the Pacers.
“There really isn’t any excuse for anything,” Brunson said. “Just the way they played tonight you’ve got to give them credit.”
Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said it was a matter of playing harder.
He said Siakam, an NBA champion with Toronto in 2019 and acquired from the Raptors in January, had provided a key veteran presence on a young and a crucial skillset that made a big difference on Friday.
“He’s the only guy on our roster that can manufacture a 16-foot shot over a seven-foot guy and make it,” Carlisle said. “He did it three or four times in the third, fourth quarter.”
While Carlisle was pleased with his team’s bounce-back win, he was already looking ahead to the test awaiting on Sunday.
“In a series like this, you can’t sit around patting yourself on the back. That’s what gets your ass kicked the next game,” he said.
The Knicks return home with yet another injury concern after forward Josh Hart departed early in the fourth quarter with what the team called abdominal soreness.
He’d clearly been troubled by discomfort around his midriff since the first quarter.
It’s just the latest blow for the Knicks, who saw forward OG Anunoby go down to a hamstring injury in game two after they were already without Julius Randle, Bojan Bogdanovic and Mitchell Robinson.
“We’ll see,” was head coach Tom Thibodeau’s tight-lipped response on whether Hart would be available on Sunday, but he made it clear the Knicks wouldn’t be citing injuries as an excuse.
“This is the nature of the playoffs,” he said. “This is what you play for. Oftentimes it comes down to a hustle play, a loose ball .. so you’re going to get tested physically, mentally, emotionally — and you’ve got to be able to get through all of that.
“So whatever it is that we’re facing, we can overcome and just keep battling.”

Coach Thomas Tuchel says he’s still leaving after talks on extending Bayern Munich stay fell through

Updated 17 May 2024
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Coach Thomas Tuchel says he’s still leaving after talks on extending Bayern Munich stay fell through

  • “We found no agreement on further cooperation so the agreement from February remains in force,” he said
  • In the three months since Bayern said Tuchel was leaving, they have tried and failed to sign a series of high-profile replacements

MUNICH: Thomas Tuchel says he is still leaving Bayern Munich after talks on extending his stay at the club fell through.
Bayern said in February that Tuchel would leave at the end of the season, but the coach said Friday that he held talks with the club on a “180-degree turn” that would have seen him stay after all.
“We found no agreement on further cooperation so the agreement from February remains in force,” he said.
In the three months since Bayern said Tuchel was leaving, they have tried and failed to sign a series of high-profile replacements.
Xabi Alonso is staying with Bayer Leverkusen after beating Bayern to the Bundesliga title, Tuchel’s predecessor Julian Nagelsmann signed an extension with the German national team, and Ralf Rangnick remains with Austria.
Bayern are without a trophy this season for the first time since 2012 after losing the Bundesliga title to Bayer Leverkusen, but Tuchel’s team were praised for reaching the Champions League semifinals before a narrow loss to Real Madrid.
There was also a petition from some Bayern fans calling on the club to keep Tuchel.
Strong European performances prompted the club to reach out to him in an attempt to persuade him to stay, the coach said.
“Above all, the feedback after Real Madrid over this last week was the basis to think again about the 180-degree turn, but we didn’t reach any agreement,” he said. “I don’t want to go into the individual points and the motivations behind them. That is behind closed doors and stays that way.”
There was tension last month after Tuchel said he had been insulted by comments from the club’s honorary president Uli Hoeness claiming the coach “doesn’t think he can improve” the team’s young stars.
Tuchel said at the time that Hoeness’ comments were “so far removed from reality” and added: “On the one hand it insults my honor as a coach, because I think we’ve shown as a coaching team for the last 15 years that young players, especially from the academy, always, always, always have a place with us in training and that they have a place on the field with their performances.”
Tuchel is heading into his last game with Bayern at Hoffenheim on Saturday with second place in the Bundesliga on the line. The injury list is as long as ever in a season when he has rarely had his first-choice team available.
Striker Harry Kane is undergoing treatment on a reported back injury, while Leroy Sané, Kim Min-jae, Kingsley Coman, Raphael Guerreiro and Jamal Musiala are also injured and Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting is unavailable with flu, Tuchel said. Right back Sacha Boey has been granted personal leave.
Bayern’s two-point advantage over third-place Stuttgart and superior goal difference mean that a draw with Hoffenheim — which is seventh and chasing European qualification — should be enough to guarantee second position. Stuttgart host Borussia Moenchengladbach.


FIFA orders legal review of Palestinian call to suspend Israel

FIFA President Gianni Infantino delivers his speech at the FIFA Congress in Bangkok, Thailand, Friday, May 17, 2024. (AP)
Updated 17 May 2024
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FIFA orders legal review of Palestinian call to suspend Israel

  • Israel has killed more than 35,000 Palestinians, according to Gaza health officials. Israel says its strikes are targeted at militants

BANKOK: Soccer’s world body FIFA ordered an urgent legal evaluation on Friday of a proposal by the Palestinian Football Association to suspend Israel over the war in Gaza, promising to address it at an extraordinary meeting of its council in July.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino took the decision at an annual Congress in Bangkok, where the PFA president made an emotional plea to delegates to hold a vote to suspend Israel from all club and national competitions, accusing it of multiple breaches of FIFA statutes.
The Palestinian proposal accuses the Israel Football Association of complicity in violations of international law by the Israeli government, discrimination against Arab players, and inclusion in its league of clubs located in Palestinian territory. The IFA rejected that.
The request for sanctions against the IFA comes two years after FIFA’s decision to suspend Russia from international competitions over its invasion of Ukraine.

HIGHLIGHT

The request for sanctions against the IFA comes two years after FIFA’s decision to suspend Russia from international competitions over its invasion of Ukraine.

“FIFA cannot afford to remain indifferent to these violations or to the ongoing genocide in Palestine, just as it did not remain indifferent to numerous precedents,” PFA President Jibril Rajoub said.
“How much more must the Palestinian football family suffer for FIFA to act with the same urgency and severity as it did in other cases? Does FIFA consider some wars to be more important than others and some victims to be more significant?“
Since an Oct. 7 cross-border raid by militant group Hamas that Israel says killed more than 1,200 people, the Gaza offensive has left more than 35,000 Palestinians dead, according to Gaza health officials. Israel says its strikes are targeted at militants.
Rajoub said 193 Palestinian players had been killed, football infrastructure destroyed, its leagues suspended and its national team required to play World Cup qualifiers abroad.

‘Cynical, political and hostile’
The proposal was sent to FIFA in March and added to the Congress agenda with the support of the Algerian, Jordanian, Syrian and Yemeni federations.
The Asian Football Confederation gave its backing on Thursday for action against Israel.
IFA chief Shino Moshe Zuares said the proposal was based on motives and ambitions that “have nothing to do with the spirit of sports or the FIFA value of separating sports from politics.”
“Today, maybe more than ever, I believe that football must be a key element in healing the fractures and the wounds, helping us and everyone to recover,” he told the Congress.
“Yet, once again, we are facing a cynical, political, and hostile attempt by the PFA to harm Israeli football.
“I am holding myself back and will not speak about the true motives out of respect for this institution,” he said.
Infantino expressed extreme shock over the Oct. 7 attacks and the offensives in Gaza and said due to the “obvious sensitivity of the issue,” independent legal experts would be brought in urgently to analyze the Palestinian allegations.
Those findings would be referred to the FIFA Council, its main decision-making body outside of the Congress, to convene an extraordinary meeting in July and take appropriate decisions, he said.

 


Nicholas Pooran powers Lucknow Super Giants to dead-rubber IPL win over hapless Mumbai Indians

Updated 17 May 2024
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Nicholas Pooran powers Lucknow Super Giants to dead-rubber IPL win over hapless Mumbai Indians

  • Mumbai out, Lucknow too failed to qualify for the playoffs

MUMBAI: Nicholas Pooran starred in Lucknow Super Giants’ 18-run victory over pre-tournament favorites Mumbai Indians in the last game of a disappointing Indian Premier League season for both teams Friday.
The maverick West Indies’ wicketkeeper-batsman hit eight sixes in his 29-ball 75 to take Lucknow to 214-6 after Mumbai skipper Hardik Pandya won the toss and chose to field first.
Mumbai crashed to 196-6 despite an impressive start by openers Rohit Sharma and Dewald Brevis in their rain-interrupted chase.
Pandya said that it was “quite difficult” for five-time champions Mumbai, who finished the 10-team league in last spot.
“This season we didn’t play good quality cricket and it cost us the whole season,” Pandya said.
Lucknow too failed to qualify for the playoffs and ended the tournament in sixth spot.
Captain KL Rahul said that it was “very disappointing.”
He blamed mid-season injuries to key players and said that they “didn’t play well enough collectively and couldn’t come together” as a team.
Earlier, Nuwan Thushara got Mumbai off to a great start and removed opener Devdutt Padikkal for a first ball duck.
Padikkal’s partner Rahul stitched together a 48-run partnership with Australia’s Marcus Stoinis, who fell to Piyush Chawla’s leg-spin for a 22-ball 28 in the sixth over.
Chawla also removed Deepak Hooda (11) to reduce Lucknow to 69-3 by the 10th over.
Thushara finally removed Pooran in the 17th over to end his match-defining, 109-run partnership with Rahul.
He also removed rookie Arshad Khan (0) in the same over and finished with 3-28 in his four-over spell.
Chawla removed Rahul, who took 41 balls for his 55 runs, in the 18th over and finished with 3-29.
Key unbeaten cameos by Ayush Badoni (22) and Krunal Pandya (12) took Lucknow to 214-6.
Mumbai’s openers took their team to 88 before Brevis fell for 23 in the ninth over.
India skipper Sharma top-scored with a 38-ball 68 with 10 fours and three sixes before he fell in the 11th over.
In between, Mumbai also lost their best T20 batsman, Suryakumar Yadav, for 0 and were reduced to 97-3 while out-of-form skipper Pandya fell for 16.
Indian rookie Naman Dhir hit five sixes and four fours in his unbeaten 28-ball 62.
Leg-spinner Ravi Bishnoi, who removed Sharma, and Afghanistan’s Naveen-ul-Haq, who removed Brevis, took four key Mumbai wickets between them.


Pakistan’s army chief vows full support for hockey team after silver medal win in Malaysia

Updated 17 May 2024
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Pakistan’s army chief vows full support for hockey team after silver medal win in Malaysia

  • The national hockey team reached the Sultan Azlan Shah Cup final for the first time in 13 years
  • The Pakistani players were also hosted and praised by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif this week

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s army chief General Asim Munir vowed on Friday to fully support the national hockey team while meeting with its players and applauding them for winning a silver medal in the recent Sultan Azlan Shah Cup in Malaysia.

A day earlier, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif also hosted the Green Shirts in Islamabad in recognition of their outstanding performance at the tournament, where they reached the finals for the first time in 13 years.

Sharif praised the team’s performance and reiterated his administration’s commitment to promoting sports, particularly hockey, in the country.

The army chief also praised the squad during the interaction with its players in Rawalpindi.

“The hockey team has brought immense pride to the nation, and we are committed to providing them with comprehensive support to ensure their continued success,” he was quoted as saying in a statement released by the military’s media wing, ISPR.

He also extended his best wishes to the players for their future endeavors.

Cricket has generally overshadowed other sports in Pakistan, including hockey, in terms of popularity and media attention.

This is despite the fact that hockey is the country’s national sport and has a rich history of international success. Yet, it has not received the same level of sustained interest or investment as cricket, with the disparity impacting its development and visibility within the country.