Stephen
and the Media
THE SUNDAY
EXPRESS (India Aug 18, 2002)
A Whole New
Ball Game
Indian Soccer
needs a kickstart to break out of the shadows. Stephen
Constantine is the man wearing the boots and, says
AMINUL ISLAM, is ready for take-off.
They've
just won their first international tournament in 28
years. They've got a new, professional kit. And, with
a bit of luck, they will be staying in three or four-star
hotels.
You
could say things have changed for Indian football since
Stephen Constantine took over as the national coach.
The real difference, however, lies not in trophies
and kit-bags but in the intangibles; in attitude, confidence
levels, aggression. In the extra crunch of a sliding
tackle, the sprint in a winger's feet.
After
a lifetime spent travelling the globe, from New York
to Nepal and Cyprus in between, Constantine faces perhaps
his toughest challenge yet: dragging Indian football,
kicking and screaming, from obscurity to a semblance
of decency. All the while, a host of critics - bitterly
opposed to foreign coaches - line up to wait for the
fall.
And
the former England under-18 coach, two months into
this job, is champing at the bit. He knows expectations
are high, as will be the price of failure. "Former
players and coaches sat on their performances and never
really did anything concrete to improve the standard.
What they did 40 years ago is totally irrelevant today.
One should look ahead, not into the past," he
feels.
How
different is he to other foreign coaches? "They
took their job as a profession. For me, it's a way
of life. Had I been a rich man, I would have trained
any club, any country, free of cost because I love
football and want to develop it as my career." He
comes with impressive enough credentials.
In
Nepal he was a national hero after his team won the
silver medal at the South Asian Games, when they weren't
even expected to qualify. That brought him the country's
highest civilian honour, after he wooed the crowds
by appearaing at big matches in Nepalese dress.
His
arrival in India has rekindled the passion and confidence
in the players. Today, Indian players are more aggressive
and dynamic in their approach then they were, thanks
to Constantine's broadened outlook. Though he exclaims "nobody
tried to drill it into their head", the Londoner
has been successful in being able to explain the significance
of the killer instinct in modern football to his new
wards.
Unless
a team has a killer instinct, he believes, it cannot
succeed in international competition. "This is
what I call the nasty style of soccer. There is no
fault with Indian players; they can play an attacking
game. It's the coaches who never taught them how to
go for the kill. Losing 0-2 or 1-2 was always condiered
an achievement. It's amazing."
Killer
instinct is a quality whose importance shouldn't be
underestimated. When he first took charge of the South
Korean team, Guus Hiddink would despair at one common
trait: every time one of his players tackled an opponent,
or beat him for speed, he would run back and apologise.
He tackled the problem head-on and reaped the rewards
two months ago.
It's
worked so far for Constantine, too, the juniors coming
back from two goals down to beat the senior Vietnam
team in the final of the LG Cup. This was a revelation
to many - including the footballers - who were convinced
that India could not win matches. "This was lacking
so far. Now, the confidence level has really improved;
the players know what I want, what I expect and, above
all, what they can do," he says.
"He
wants us to play rough and tough. My brief association
with the coach has made me understand what killer instinct
is all about," says Abhishek Yadav, who scored
the match-winner in the final. Constantine, he feels,
would probably pick a less skillful play over one low
on aggression.
Before
the players went to Vietnam, they played a match against
a team of veterans in Kolkata. "There was no quarter
given or taken," says one of the players. "He
told us to play that same brand of football. Indian
coaches might advise players to take things lightly
against weaker rivals. But this man said nothing doing."
It's
a toughness that spreads to team discipline. Yadav
recals how a senior player who didn't toe the coaches
line during the camp was made to realise his mistake. "Coach
did not say anything to the particular senior during
the camp. He just left him out of the team."
There
was a time when Constantine would keep Arsene Wenger's
autobiography close to his heart; the Englishman modelled
himself on a professor, as does Wenger, than a football
coach. Actually, coaching isn't a profession for him,
more a way of life. The fun factor is clear from Constantine's
'active' coaching: unlike other indian coaches, he
plays with the boys, not merely shout instructions
from the saielines.
But,
unlike most coaches, he doesn't believe in any concrete
theories and gameplans. "Systems and formation
don't win games, players do. It all depends on the
circumstances and situation. I follow a simple, fluid
attacking game. I don't agree with those who say that
attacking methods don't suit Indian players."
Bhaichung
Bhutia, one of India's most celebrated strikers, couldn't
agree more. "Working with him has been a fantastic
experience. My fitness level;s have gone up and I'm
feeling more confident than I was even a year ago." Fitness
has been another main issue for Constantine. Yadev
says the team played few matches during the Jamshedpur
camp. "Most of our routine included building fitness
levels. He (coach) never compromised on this. Indian
coaches might think at one stage 'enough is enough',
but for Constantine the full stop comes much later
in the book."
And
the apparent lack of fixed tactics hasn't hurt the
team much: India scored 11 goals (three from Bhutia)
in the LG Cup and got at least 30 chances. "Earlier,
too, our coaches tried different formations but things
went wrong in the implementation stage," the Indian
skipper added.
Maybe
it's a simple replacement of blacboard by brainpower.
Constantine, feels former skipper Jo Paul Ancheri,
can read a player quickly and accurately. "He
can judge a player's strengths and weaknesses, and
then put the player in a position that suits him. For
example, in Vietnam, the coach always preferred to
use Yadev, a rookie striker, as a substitute. And the
Mahindra player scored every time he came on as a replacement."
Indeed,
Yadev may well be considered the find of the tournament,
and is proof the the coach's willingness to aschew
the safe path for one offering greater risks and rewards. "He's
highly positive, a motivator par excellence," he
says. "He taught us the finer points of the game
with the help of his massive stock of videos. It was
a new experience."
It's
the human touch, something missing in Indian coaches,
that could be the key to Constantine's success. Once
off the field, Constantine sheds his dictator's garb. "He's
like a friend to us. We talk about everything under
the sun with him, which has helped the bonds grow stronger," says
Yadav.
He's
also aware of the importance of pride and self-belief,
and keeps reminding his players that they are part
of a national team. With that comes certain priveleges,
and he's fought for those too. Not satified with the
usual hotel in Old Delhi, he's fighting to get the
team booked into a four-star hotel. "The team
didn't have a proper kit, I had to fight for that.
You can't ignore the players' interests, especially
when they are playing for their country."
The
ride ahead will be bumpy. Constantine is his own man,
and won't have it any other way. He showed it by choosing
a team for Vietnam that had 10 uncapped players. Now,
he's ruffled the feathers of the venerable Maidan clubs
by proposing to the All-India Football Federation that
senior players be kept for national duty. Also, he
says, there are too many tournaments and feels there
should be a reduction on the matches played every year.
Others
before him have tried, but failed. But there's something
about Constantine - maybe the brutal honesty, which
comes out in his expletive-heavy speech - that makes
you think he might just pull it off. His philosophy
is simple: If you want something, go get it. Indian
football may have kicked off the most important game
in its life.
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