PepG
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I really think that Zizou will coach Juventus at some point and then the French national team. And that's about it. He's already a football legend both as a player and a coach.
When he leaves Real Madrid I hope is to train France national team, they have a very good and young generation now so winning an Euro or WC with France as a manager would be the only way to further enlighten an already brilliant career. It would be odd to watch him manage other team outside Real Madrid but yeah maybe a job like Chelsea, PSG or a team like that would be perfect for him; a team with a great squad and brilliant players where he has to focus more on managing their egos.
He's the perfect manager for the Real Madrid circus.
Their players are so good, and so famous, that a coach like Benitez, who looks like the owner of a tapas bar and achieved nothing as a player, will never command their respect. Zidane will still be amazing on the training ground and still has a look about him, hence they play for him.
Doesn't mean Zidane would succeed elsewhere - to extend the Benitez comparison, he might struggle if he went to a Liverpool or Valencia, with lesser players. But he's ideally suited to the role he's got now.
He's the perfect manager for the Real Madrid circus.
Their players are so good, and so famous, that a coach like Benitez, who looks like the owner of a tapas bar and achieved nothing as a player, will never command their respect. Zidane will still be amazing on the training ground and still has a look about him, hence they play for him.
Doesn't mean Zidane would succeed elsewhere - to extend the Benitez comparison, he might struggle if he went to a Liverpool or Valencia, with lesser players. But he's ideally suited to the role he's got now.
I might get plastered for saying this - but I feel that if one day we had to hire an ex United player as a manager; it may not be too bad.
Madrid kept this 'galactico' thing going on season after season & Zidane comes in and clearly knows exactly what the club is about. They are much more of a team now and built around an understanding, the same way Pep showed up at Barca after dismantling Rijkaards superstars.
Who hates Zidane?So far so good for him. It's hard to criticize him, he's done what no one has ever done in the CL and he's won the Spanish league. Love him or hate him, those achievements are truly incredible after 1.5 years as a manager.
Who hates Zidane?![]()
There are reasons why madrid changes manager like changing underwear and still won the cl.
There are reasons why united hires lvg and mourinho and still struggle to get back to saf level.
And it simply doesn't mean stick zidane at united and he'll win, nor that sticking for example giggs at madrid and they'll crumble.
I might get plastered for saying this - but I feel that if one day we had to hire an ex United player as a manager; it may not be too bad.
Madrid kept this 'galactico' thing going on season after season & Zidane comes in and clearly knows exactly what the club is about. They are much more of a team now and built around an understanding, the same way Pep showed up at Barca after dismantling Rijkaards superstars.
You can't argue with what he's done this season but I don't think it's a true barometer of how great a manager he is or will become. It's a bit like the Liverpool dynasty back in the day when Shankley handed over to Paisley and likewise onto Fagan. The team is so well oiled that virtually any manager could take the reigns and maintain success.
We would be the sort of club that would truly test Zidane. A gigantic club to match his own status as a great player but a club that needs properly reawakening and in an era where there is real competition at home and abroad.
It wasn't as simple for Zidane to arrive and coach Real Madrid as there was a whole process before he was given the opportunity to become a manager.
Once he retired from football it didn't pass long when Florentino appointed him as his advisor then he became sport advisor for the club, and he was influential in the signing of players like Raphael Varane and Isco. Then he made something like a manager course or something in France and then he was appointed as Ancelotti's assistant for the 2013/2014 season in which we also lifted the Undecima. After that he became the manager of Real Madrid Castilla (Real Madrid reserves team in the second division of Spanish football) and while he was quite average there he had accumulated some experience before becoming the full manager of Real Madrid after sacking Benitez.
So yeah, he was an already legendary player for us and he knew the club as a player but he also was involved in other areas of how the club was run, they didn't just hand him the position out of nothing just because it was him.
I believe the hard work into turning Real Madrid competitive and ruthless again was done by Mourinho and although his final season things didn't end up very well I do believe he put us on the right track. Then we had Ancelotti who has almost the opposite vibe of Mourinho and I also think that was a key factor to stabilize the club and bring some ease and comfort after being pushed to very limit by Mourinho, which was necessary but they're humans after all.
Then it became Benitez who I believe did almost everything wrong and was never totally welcomed by the fans or the players. That was just a plain bad appointment and the only 'good' thing from appointing him was sacking him, setting lower standards and replace him with Zidane. We had given that season for lost so Zidane hadn't as much pressure had he being the manager at the start of the season and it ended pretty well for us; we could have won that league as well (we ended just one point behind) and won the undecima (11th UCL).
So my point is that it's not that simple as there were a series of circumstances that played in his favor and he also worked hard for this opportunity and has made the best out of it.
It wasn't as simple for Zidane to arrive and coach Real Madrid as there was a whole process before he was given the opportunity to become a manager.
Once he retired from football it didn't pass long when Florentino appointed him as his advisor then he became sport advisor for the club, and he was influential in the signing of players like Raphael Varane and Isco. Then he made something like a manager course or something in France and then he was appointed as Ancelotti's assistant for the 2013/2014 season in which we also lifted the Undecima. After that he became the manager of Real Madrid Castilla (Real Madrid reserves team in the second division of Spanish football) and while he was quite average there he had accumulated some experience before becoming the full manager of Real Madrid after sacking Benitez.
So yeah, he was an already legendary player for us and he knew the club as a player but he also was involved in other areas of how the club was run, they didn't just hand him the position out of nothing just because it was him.
I believe the hard work into turning Real Madrid competitive and ruthless again was done by Mourinho and although his final season things didn't end up very well I do believe he put us on the right track. Then we had Ancelotti who has almost the opposite vibe of Mourinho and I also think that was a key factor to stabilize the club and bring some ease and comfort after being pushed to very limit by Mourinho, which was necessary but they're humans after all.
Then it became Benitez who I believe did almost everything wrong and was never totally welcomed by the fans or the players. That was just a plain bad appointment and the only 'good' thing from appointing him was sacking him, setting lower standards and replace him with Zidane. We had given that season for lost so Zidane hadn't as much pressure had he being the manager at the start of the season and it ended pretty well for us; we could have won that league as well (we ended just one point behind) and won the undecima (11th UCL).
So my point is that it's not that simple as there were a series of circumstances that played in his favor and he also worked hard for this opportunity and has made the best out of it.
There are so many things to hate about him, you just gotta be willing to know more about him or not.Who hates Zidane?![]()
Like you know anything about him?There are so many things to hate about him, you just gotta be willing to know more about him or not.
Like you know anything about him?
There are so many elements of management that he hasn't encountered yet. A squad like that creates a bubble.
Let's see him build a team, then build another one. At a club where he doesn't have a crazy collection of world class players with the ability to sign anybody he likes.
Can he scout, make players better, win against the odds etc etc.
He probably had to do some of that when he was Real's Sporting Director.
He's the perfect manager for the Real Madrid circus.
Their players are so good, and so famous, that a coach like Benitez, who looks like the owner of a tapas bar and achieved nothing as a player, will never command their respect. Zidane will still be amazing on the training ground and still has a look about him, hence they play for him.
Doesn't mean Zidane would succeed elsewhere - to extend the Benitez comparison, he might struggle if he went to a Liverpool or Valencia, with lesser players. But he's ideally suited to the role he's got now.
Bringing up Di Matteo? Seriously? Did he go on to win his domestic league and retain the champions league crown?I'm not denying he's clearly done something right when he's won back to back UCL's and the league. It's a fantastic achievement. But the fact remains that he did not build (the majority) of this squad. When/if he manages to replace the key players of this squad and still be successful or build his own successful team elsewhere I'll happily agree that he's proven himself to be a great manager.
Di Matteo won the UCL with a much, much inferior squad. Does that make him a great manager? Obviously not.
Does notMaterazzi
Bringing up Di Matteo? Seriously? Did he go on to win his domestic league and retain the champions league crown?
Yes, seriously, he won the CL......