South American coaches lead Albania to Euro 2024 spot

Albania's head coach Sylvinho, background, and his assistant Argentinian Pablo Zabaleta attend an interview with the Associated Press in Tirana, Albania, Wednesday. Taking it into the Euro 2024 finals was a dream come true for Albania's Latin coaches. (AP)
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Updated 23 November 2023
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South American coaches lead Albania to Euro 2024 spot

  • Sylvinho has drawn on his experiences under Pep Guardiola, whom he played for at Barcelona, and former Brazil coach Tite to create an Albanian team spirit that stresses a “complex” and “collective” game of soccer
  • Developing Albania into a strong team for Euro 2024 and beyond remains a key goal

TIRANA, Albania: Albania qualified for just their second European Championship in style, atop a group that included the Czech Republic and Poland.

It’s a dream come true for the team’s South American coaches.

“It’s unbelievable,” Brazilian head coach Sylvinho said Wednesday. “We’ve got everything around a moment. We did a great job. Everyone, together.”

Sylvinho brought in countryman Doriva and Argentinian Pablo Zabaleta as his assistants when he was hired in January.

They formed a 24-member squad from among 60 Albanian players in Italian, Spanish, French, English leagues and beyond, not to mention local ones.

Zabaleta will never forget the call from Sylvinho, his former Manchester City teammate with whom he has also established close family ties. They determined Albania had “a good generation of players.”

“We want to build a team that we’re able to play good football. I mean, in the way we see football,” Zabaleta said.

Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama awarded the Golden Eagle medal to Sylvinho during a meeting of the Albanian diaspora on Wednesday.

“You are the first non-Albanian receiving the Golden Eagle not for what you have done but because you are an Albanian being born,” Rama told the Brazilian. “After the Golden Eagle very soon you should accept the Albanian citizenship too.”

Albania have made it to the European Championship only once before — in 2016 under Italian coach Giovanni de Biasi.

Sylvinho has drawn on his experiences under Pep Guardiola, whom he played for at Barcelona, and former Brazil coach Tite to create an Albanian team spirit that stresses a “complex” and “collective” game of soccer.

“Talent can win a game of football,” Zabaleta said. “But the squad, the spirit of a team, can achieve good things in football or win trophies.”

With no big names in the team, finding players to adapt to their style of play has resulted in success.

They wanted a left forward to play on the right side. That turned out to be Jasir Asani, a 28-year-old who plays for South Korean club Gwangju and who has scored some Messi-like goals.

They wanted a left back to take the ball faster to the attack and combine with the older players. It was 20-year-old Mario Mitaj of Lokomotiv Moscow who teams well with veteran Lazio winger Elseid Hysaj.

Developing Albania into a strong team for Euro 2024 and beyond remains a key goal.

“If you have to be consistent,” said Sylvinho, who had previous coaching stints with Lyon in France and Corinthians in Brazil. “You have to grow day by day, ‘avash avash’ (‘slowly slowly’ in Albanian). That’s the challenge that you have now.”

Zabaleta added: “We are not afraid of anyone. We are a good team. We have good players, and the most important thing is we need to play 100 percent every game. That’s the spirit.”

Both were reluctant to say where they saw themselves after next summer’s tournament in Germany.

“I prefer to live the unbelievable moment to dream for us and prepare the team from the next six or seven months,” Sylvinho said.

Zabaleta acknowledged that working with a national team is quieter compared to the intensity of club soccer.

“When you have a family behind you, you need to think about them,” he said, adding that he misses his wife and two young sons living in Barcelona.

They enjoy the time in Tirana, with “people (being) friendly, with Brazilian hugs, talk. Food is amazing. Amazing food. Fish,” Sylvinho said.

Sylvinho and Zabaleta hail from two of world soccer’s biggest rivals, but they are united in working together in their new roles.

“Except when Argentina plays Brazil,” Zabaleta said. “The next day he pays the dinner, he pays the lunch. But it’s incredible.”


Galatasaray thrash 10-man Juve in Champions League play-off 1st leg

Updated 18 February 2026
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Galatasaray thrash 10-man Juve in Champions League play-off 1st leg

  • Colombian full-back Juan Cabal was dismissed for two bookings in a calamitous second half
  • This was Juve’s joint-second heaviest defeat in European competition, after their 7-0 humbling by Wiener Sport-Club in 1958

ISTANBUL: Dutch midfielder Noa Lang scored a brace as Galatasaray thumped Juventus 5-2 in a pulsating contest in Istanbul on Tuesday in the first leg of a Champions League playoff.
In a nerve-shredding atmosphere, Luciano Spalletti’s Juventus actually led 2-1 at half-time after Teun Koopmeiners replied to Brazilian midfielder Gabriel Sara’s opener with a brace of his own.
But Colombian full-back Juan Cabal was dismissed for two bookings in a calamitous second half as Lang’s brace and goals from Davinson Sanchez and Sacha Boey sunk the Old Lady, who faced a miserable return to Turin.
“We took several steps backwards,” moaned Spalletti, whose team had been rejuvenated since he took over in late October with Juve seventh in Serie A and languishing outside the play-off spots in the Champions League after failing to win any of their first three matches.
“We finished the first half badly, we tried to sort things out but we lacked personality and character,” added the 66-year-old.
“Obviously the sending off weighed heavily on us, but we also played our part... We didn’t realize the danger in what we were doing.”
This was Juve’s joint-second heaviest defeat in European competition, after their 7-0 humbling by Wiener Sport-Club, who currently play in Austria’s regional leagues, back in 1958.
Sara opened the scoring with a slick left-footed strike from just inside the box on 15 minutes, but that lead was short-lived.
Gala goalkeeper Ugurcan Cakir could only parry Khephren Thuram’s powerful header into the path of the onrushing Koopmeiners, who tapped in the leveller just a minute later.
Koopmeiners then picked out the top corner from the edge of the box on 32 minutes after a clever exchange with US midfielder Weston McKennie.
That was as good as it got for the visitors, though.
Okan Buruk’s Turkish champions ran riot after the break as Lang pounced on a loose ball in the six-yard box to level on 49 minutes.
Sanchez nodded Gala ahead on the hour mark as the home fans ramped up the volume.
Juve complained of an unfair dismissal in their 3-2 defeat to Serie A leaders Inter Milan at the weekend, but they could have no issues with Cabal’s sending off on 67 minutes.
Lang bagged his brace shortly afterwards as he pounced on the loose ball after Victor Osimhen robbed English center-back Lloyd Kelly from Thuram’s poor pass inside his own box.
Substitute Boey ensured Gala would take a commanding lead to Turin next week as he lashed home from an angle five minutes from time.