ISSUE 13/2015, 2 APRIL 2015
ENGLISH EDITION
Fédération Internationale de Football Association – Since 1904
Xabi Alonso
Exclusively top-class LIECHTENSTEIN WHERE PROS AND AMATEURS JOIN FORCES
BLATTER AFRICAN FOOTBALL DESERVES RESPECT
JAMAICA ARNETT GARDENS BACK TO THEIR BEST W W W.FIFA.COM/ THEWEEKLY
THIS WEEK IN THE WORLD OF FOOTBALL
6
North and Central America 35 members www.concacaf.com
Xabi Alonso Having previously won Europe’s top club competition with both Liverpool and Real Madrid, the world and European champion is now trying to achieve something with Bayern Munich that only Clarence Seedorf has done before: win the Champions League with three different clubs. Roland Zorn sat down for an interview with Xabi Alonso.
14
Hong Kong Premier League champions Kitchee are once again poised to outpace their rivals under the watchful eye of Spanish coach Jose Francisco Molina.
17
Sepp Blatter With the CAF Congress set to start next week, the FIFA President says in his weekly column: “We must show African football all the great appreciation and respect it deserves.”
18
Canada 2015 The Cameroon women’s national team have qualified for their first Women’s World Cup finals, and one player has made a decisive contribution on both occasions – defender Christine Manie.
South America 10 members www.conmebol.com
15 Exclusively top-class Our cover picture shows Spanish World Cup winner and two-time European champion Xabi Alonso of Bayern Munich.
Jamaica Andre Clennon and Arnett Gardens are on course for the Premier League title.
The FIFA Weekly Magazine App The FIFA Weekly Magazine is available in four languages and also on your tablet every Friday. http://www.fifa.com/mobile
2
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
FIFA Women’s World Cup 6 June – 5 July 2015, Canada
Getty Images (2), Andreas Nilsson, Ricardo Makyn
Gustaff Choos
THIS WEEK IN THE WORLD OF FOOTBALL
Europe 54 members www.uefa.com
Africa 54 members www.cafonline.com
Asia 46 members www.the-afc.com
Oceania 11 members www.oceaniafootball.com
37
Birgit Wiese Husky dogs changed the former German international’s life.
22
Liechtenstein Coach Rene Pauritsch and his team would not be dissatisfied with eight points from their EURO 2016 qualifying campaign.
28
History In 1895, North and South met at London’s Crouch End Athletic Ground to contest the first official women’s football match.
Blue Stars/FIFA Youth Cup
FIFA U-20 World Cup
FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup
FIFA U-17 World Cup
13/14 May 2015, Zurich, Switzerland
30 May – 20 June 2015, New Zealand
9 – 19 July 2015, Portugal
17 October – 8 November 2015, Chile
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
3
UNCOVERED
One title at a time W
hen Bayern Munich announced the arrival of Xabi Alonso from Real Madrid last late summer, a small number of critics in Germany wondered whether or not he was a good signing. The Basque native, who was almost 33 at the time, was brought in to help the record German champions cover the injury-enforced absences of Javi Martinez, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Thiago. Most observers adopted a wait-and-see attitude before reaching any conclusions, only to be completely won over after Alonso’s very first game for the club. Fans throughout the country were left stunned as the World Cup winner and two-time European champion captured the imagination with his intelligent passing game and seamless integration into Bayern’s world-class line-up. At that stage, he had not even been to the club’s training complex on Sabener Strasse. Alonso won the Champions League with Liverpool and Real Madrid, and should he do so again with Bayern he would become the second player, after Clarence Seedorf, to lift the trophy with three different clubs. Our staff writer Roland Zorn’s interview with Alonso in Munich starts on page six. Å
Mario Wagner/2Agenten
Perikles Monioudis
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
5
X ABI ALONSO
THE DIRECTOR Rarely has a player settled so quickly and seamlessly into a world-class team as Xabi Alonso has at Bayern. But how is the Spaniard finding life in Munich, and what does he still want to achieve after European glory with Liverpool and Real Madrid? Roland Zorn sat down with him for an exclusive interview.
6
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
A. Hassenstein / Getty Images for FC Bayern
X ABI ALONSO
Now off to Bayern! Xabi Alonso was keen to take on a new challenge after five years with Real Madrid. T H E F I FA W E E K LY
7
X ABI ALONSO
Xabi Alonso, having now spent seven months with Bayern Munich, do you speak German yet? Xabi Alonso: A little, but I can’t understand the language particularly well so far. I’m having three hours of language lessons a week though, so it’s getting easier all the time. By next year I’d like to be able to give interviews in German too.
That says a lot about your constant readiness to learn and your curiosity for other clubs and countries. Why did you decide to go to Germany for another adventure after five years with Liverpool and five years with Real Madrid? After beating our city rivals Atletico in the Champions League final last year, it seemed like the time had come to do something different again. We had managed to win la décima, Madrid’s long-awaited tenth victory in Europe’s greatest club competition, a contest that has captivated the fans since the European Cup days. I thought the time was right to try something new with one of the world’s best teams and in one of the best three leagues in Europe. And I was grateful to Real for letting me go even though I had a contract that was due to run until 2016.
Was Bayern coach Pep Guardiola, who won the Champions League twice with Real’s great Spanish rivals Barcelona, one of the key reasons why you chose to begin a new chapter of your outstanding football career in Munich? There were many good reasons to move to Bayern, and Pep Guardiola was definitely one of them.
How did it feel to arrive at Sabener Strasse and begin training with the squad? I immediately realised how Guardiola’s unique intensity has enabled him to achieve so much in his relatively short career so far. To be able to learn even more about football under his guidance is incredibly motivating and offers a great challenge. He’s a rigorous thinker and worker, very analytical, a great tactician and a methodical innovator. Pep understands everything about the game. He doesn’t force his way of thinking on us players; instead he convinces us about his ideas. If you can manage that as a coach, you know your players will push themselves even further and fight even harder for the team’s shared goals.
“As a defensive midfielder, I have to make a huge number of small yet correct decisions.”
BAYERN MUNICH Despite only joining the club in August 2014,
Alonso is already on course to celebrate championship success with Bayern and may well seal a double or even a treble.
How have you settled in, both at Bayern and in Munich? Very well. Just like at Liverpool and with Real, I managed to slot into the team quickly. I had the luck and pleasure of arriving in Munich on 29 August 2014 and being in the starting line-up for the club’s 1-1 draw away to Schalke the very next day. I immediately felt at home out on the pitch when I realised that I trusted my new team-mates. That feeling is very important for a player who sees as much of the ball as I do
It’s easy. The city is beautiful, the people are friendly, and although the club is the biggest in Germany, there’s a great family feel about it. It’s wonderful to see how close the fans are able to get at training. I didn’t experience anything quite like that in either Liverpool or Madrid.
That would be fantastic, but my first priority is to go about my job one week at a time and contribute to the collective success of the team in whatever way I can.
Bayern gives the impression of being a perfectly organised club where everything is thought through and organised down to the very last detail. Did that surprise you?
8
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
Pressefoto Ulmer, imago (2)
And how is life in Munich for you, your wife and three children? If all goes well for Bayern, you could win the treble by the end of the season: the Bundesliga, German Cup and UEFA Champions League. Does the idea of becoming the second player after Clarence Seedorf to win European football’s biggest trophy with three different clubs give you added incentive?
X ABI ALONSO
REAL MADRID The Spaniard collected six titles between 2009 and 2014: a World Cup, European Championship, Champions League, Primera Division and two Copa del Reys.
XABI ALONSO After reacting with shock when their club let Toni Kroos go to Real Madrid, Bayern Munich fans had even more to talk about when Xabi Alonso arrived from the Bernabeu. Although the signing may have been a matter of urgency, it turned out to be a shrewd move. Just a day after joining the German champions, Alonso delivered a solid 68-minute performance against Schalke despite not having yet trained with his new team-mates. “The first 20 minutes were a revelation,” said Dortmund coach Jurgen Klopp. “I’ve never seen anything like it.” According to the DFL, the Spaniard was in possession of the ball 213 times during Bayern’s match against Cologne. Name: Xabier “Xabi” Alonso Olano Born: 25 November 1981 in Tolosa, Basque Country Honours: World Cup, 2 European Championships, 2 Champions League titles, La Liga title, FA Cup, 2 Copa del Reys Awards: 2003 Best Spanish player in La Liga Spain national team: 114 caps, 16 goals tfw
LIVERPOOL While playing in England between 2004 and 2009, Alonso won the European Championship, Champions League and FA Cup.
Not really. Everything is set up so well, just like you imagine Germany to be as an outsider.
Your hometown club and the place where you began your professional career, Real Sociedad, is synonymous with tradition, while Liverpool, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich are all representative of footballing heritage, greatness and success. Is the fact that you have only ever played for teams with such proud histories a matter of coincidence or a consequence of your quality as a player? I’d describe it as a huge stroke of luck to have been able to play for such special clubs throughout my career. Liverpool, Real and Bayern are definitely part of the sport’s aristocracy. I feel extremely privileged, even though the kind of football I play is a little more ‘working-class’.
Do you think so? Although your style of play sometimes looks straightforward and unfussy, it can’t be easy to deliver such precision and organisation as consistently as you have. T H E F I FA W E E K LY
9
X ABI ALONSO
Spaniards unite Xabi Alonso fitted into Bayern Munich’s team straight away – thanks in no small part to coach Pep Guardiola.
“Guardiola doesn’t force his way of thinking on us players; instead he convinces us about his ideas.” 10
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
You seem to exert a kind of magnetic pull on the ball while doing all this. Do you need to have this constant ball contact to be able to help your team best? As a defensive midfielder, I have to make a huge number of small yet correct decisions. Sometimes my play includes a dream pass, and that’s one of the highlights in my job, along with the goals I don’t score all that often. But more important than those moments are the many small and, at first, seemingly insignificant passes or shifts in play that might give one of my team-mates a chance to dribble or plays them in effectively. I believe in being able to read a match well and control it, and that’s the basis of what I do. You need to have plenty of patience too. My role is to bring structure and balance into the game and enable my team-mates to capitalise on that.
Your seemingly dominant way of taking control of a game says a lot about your sense of responsibility and your skills as a provider. At first glance, it almost appears as though you are surreptitiously captaining a team packed with leaders.
imago, Alex Grimm / Bongarts / Getty Images
The essence of my game has always stayed the same, even though I’ve become a more mature player as my career has developed. I like to act as a kind of relay between attack and defence right in the centre of action, keep the play flowing, play plenty of passes and maintain a sense of order on the pitch. I try to open up the space my team-mates need in attack to score a goal, while in defence my aim is to close down the areas where our opponents could pose a threat.
X ABI ALONSO
Alessandro Bianchi / Reuters
European champion again Alonso strides across the Kiev pitch in July 2012.
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
11
X ABI ALONSO
Liverpool instead of Barcelona
Father and son Perico Alonso soent three seasons at Barcelona, while Xabi began his career at Real Sociedad.
12
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
It seems fitting that the former Liverpool man has finally come under the Bayern coach’s wing. In the early part of his career, when he was plying his trade with Real Sociedad, he was seen by many Barcelona fans as the natural successor to Guardiola on the pitch. The player even had a link with the club, his father Periko Alonso having spent three seasons at the Camp Nou in the early eighties, patrolling a defensive midfield beat and providing valuable protection for the likes of Bernd Schuster and Diego Maradona. Six years in Barcelona Following his Barça stint, Periko spent three seasons at Sabadell, meaning Xabi, who was born in 1981, spent the first six years of his life in Barcelona. The family then returned to San Sebastian, where Periko tried his hand at coaching and Xabi and brother Mikel began playing for youth clubs in the city. The two siblings joined Real Sociedad, with Xabi spending a short time on loan at Eibar before
John Toshack recalled him and put him straight in the first team. Aged 21, he enjoyed a superb debut season with the txuri-urdin. More technically gifted than his father, he was a commanding presence in the centre of midfield, equally adept at breaking up play and building it. Wanderlust Though rumours of a move to Barcelona began to circulate and were gratefully received by azulgrana fans, Xabi’s next port of call would be Liverpool, where fellow Spaniard Rafael Benitez had taken charge. Adapting almost seamlessly to English football, Xabi became a more physical and complete player during his five-year stay on Merseyside, forging a formidable midfield association with Steven Gerrard, about which Reds fans still reminisce. The highpoint of his Anfield sojourn came in his first season, when he scored in Liverpool’s dramatic comeback against AC Milan in the 2005 UEFA Champions League final in Istanbul. The Xabi who then played such a key role for Spain and Jose Mourinho’s Real Madrid was rewarded for his shrewdness and maturity with a string of other winner’s medals. Now 33, his move to Bayern is a logical step, while also a nod to a past that might have been at Barcelona. His distinguished career has taken him to some of Europe’s biggest clubs, and perhaps the biggest tribute that can be paid to him is that he has stayed for several seasons at each, bringing his considerable influence to bear every time, shaping a change in style on his arrival and triggering another on his departure. Jordi Punti
Bob Thomas, Getty Images / imago
F
ormer Spain international Xabi Alonso had only been a Bayern Munich player for a few weeks when he set a new Bundesliga record for the number of possessions in a match, 213, against Cologne on 27 September last year (see inset on page nine). Considering the high pace of the German game, it is quite an achievement, comfortably outstripping the previous record of 177 touches, set the season before by another Bayern man, Thiago Alcantara. Statistics such as these highlight the profound influence Pep Guardiola has had on Bayern since taking over as coach. Much like Woody Allen in his more recent work, Guardiola likes to project himself on to the pitch, as the ball-playing midfielder controlling the pace of the game and imposing his belief in possession-based football. A Barcelona graduate, Thiago is a perfect fit as Guardiola’s leading man, though his ongoing injury problems forced his coach to look for a replacement last year. And there are few who can play the part like Xabi Alonso.
X ABI ALONSO
I’ve never been captain at any of my clubs, not for a single game – nor have I ever had to be. When I arrived at Liverpool, greats such as Steven Gerrard, Jamie Carragher or Sami Hyypia had already been there for a long time, much like Iker Casillas and Sergio Ramos at Real Madrid or Philipp Lahm, Bastian Schweinsteiger and Manuel Neuer at Bayern. Of course it’s a matter of respect to acknowledge that and deliver impeccable performances on the pitch. Much like at the start of my years with the Reds and Real, the first priority upon arriving at Munich was for me to adapt to my new team – not the other way around.
“Raul opened the door for Spanish players when he moved to the Bundesliga.” Your football expertise has been nurtured by some of the sport’s best coaches: Rafael Benitez, Jose Mourinho, Carlo Ancelotti, Pep Guardiola, Luis Aragones and Vicente del Bosque. Could you wish for anything better in this respect? Of course it would be fantastic to come out on top in the Champions League once again with Bayern and Guardiola, who also has the opportunity to win Europe’s biggest club trophy again. It’s particularly appealing given that I have the most amazing memories from the “Miracle of Istanbul”, where Benitez led our Liverpool side back from a 3-0 deficit at half-time to 3-3 after 90 minutes, then guided us through extra time all the way to penalties, which we ended up winning 3-2. I was also delighted with Ancelotti’s masterstroke a year ago, when we won the Madrid derby against Atletico in the Champions League final after extra time. Unfortunately I was suspended for that match after picking up my third yellow card of the campaign in Real’s 4-0 secondleg win over Munich. Nevertheless, I still played my part in what, for the time being, is the most recent major success I’ve been able to celebrate in my career.
So what made each of your four title-winning coaches unique?
Felix Hoerhager / Keystone / EPA
Benitez was very analytical and had a plan for every match. Mourinho was tactically shrewd and a great motivator. Ancelotti, like Aragones and del Bosque, was someone who has a very approachable and human way of steering teams toward success. As I’ve already mentioned, Guardiola is unbelievable. We’ve mastered at least three different formations under his guidance.
Given that you know Europe’s three biggest leagues from the inside, can you tell us a little about the differences between your three clubs and between the Premier League, Primera Division and Bundesliga from your own experience? I’ve got a very balanced view, as you can’t talk about pros and cons when it comes to three such strong leagues. The football played in the Premier League is extremely quick and athletic, similar to that played in the Bundesliga. The long ball is also part of the arsenal of many teams in England. In contrast, there is a very strong emphasis in Germany on creating space as we do at Bayern with a style of play based on possession and control, or opening up that space with aggres-
Embracing a Bayern tradition Alonso and family at the Oktoberfest photo shoot.
sive pressing like Borussia Dortmund did during their most dominant period. The different stylistic elements in Spain make technical play more important. At Real our attacking power was so strong, with incredible forwards like Cristiano Ronaldo, Karim Benzema and Gareth Bale, that everything was geared towards that. As a result I tried to contribute by maintaining a balance between the different parts of the team.
Should you choose to leave the Bundesliga when your current contract expires in 2016, do you think other top Spanish players will make the move to Germany? I’m sure they will; after all, the sporting quality and predominantly sold-out stadiums have made the Bundesliga an increasingly attractive league over the past four or five years. Previously the only goal really worth pursuing for Spanish players outside the Primera Division was the Premier League. Now if they move to foreign clubs, they either go to England or, as has been proven many times in recent years, to Germany. Raul definitely opened the door in that respect when he moved from Real Madrid to Schalke in 2010. Å T H E F I FA W E E K LY
13
TALK ING POIN T S
O N
T H E
Hong Kong: Premier League
Un stoppable David Winner is a London-based author and journalist. His books on football include ‘Brilliant
I N S I D E
only be three points clear of their nearest rival, Eastern, but they are on a roll. They’ve won their last five premier league matches, scoring 16 goals and conceding twice in the process. That run of victories included the potentially decisive 4-0 destruction of Eastern back in February.
But fans tend to follow foreign teams, especially English ones. Saturday’s match was watched by just 582 spectators while Kitchee’s last home game – an exciting 2-1 win over title rivals Sun Pegasus with whom they share the Mong Kok Stadium attracted a crowd of 1,849.
With four games to go Kitchee’s remaining fixtures are against teams in the lower half of the table. On Saturday the goalscorers reflected the club’s cosmopolitan identity. Hong Kong international Xu Deshuai netted twice and the other goals were shared between Jorge Tarres, a striker who began his career with Espanyol in Spain, Canadian former Ajax youth player Matthew Lam and defender Daniel Cancela, once of Deportivo La Coruna. To complete a perfect game, goalkeeper Wang Zhenpeng saved a second half penalty by Rangers' Brazilian captain Roberto Fronza.
By contrast, when in recent seasons Kitchee have played top English sides Manchester United, Arsenal and Chelsea in pre-season friendlies they’ve attracted crowds of between 34,000 and 40,000 in the larger Hong Kong Stadium. Å
Orange’ and ‘Dennis Bergkamp:
Kitchee appear to be feeling good about their chances of winning the inaugural Hong Kong Premier League title after their latest impressive performance – a 5-0 away victory over Rangers at Kowloon Bay Park last weekend. After the match, Kitchee’s captain Lo Kwan Yee was quoted as saying: “The league title should not be a big problem.” Naturally, he made sure to add about every match being a challenge and stressed that his side would take nothing for granted. But his confidence was plain enough and reflects the widespread belief that the reigning domestic champions (they also won last year’s First Division title) are rapidly becoming unstoppable. The team, coached by former Atletico Madrid and Spain goalkeeper Jose Molina, may
Clear winners Kitchee, in blue and salmon, dispatched Rangers 5-0 away from home. 14
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
The Premier League, sponsored by the BOCG insurance company, replaced the old Hong Kong First Division last year and was created to raise interest and standards in local football. There’s long been plenty of passion for the game in the former British colony.
HKFA
Stillness and Speed’.
Jamaica: Premier League
Bac k w it h a ba ng Sven Goldmann is a leading football correspondent at Tages spiegel newspaper in Berlin.
Ricardo Makyn
It looks set to be a pleasant spring in the concrete jungle of Kingston, and nowhere more so than in the South Saint Andrew district of Jamaica’s capital city, where Arnett Gardens FC are based. The Junglists, as they are widely known, are currently enjoying their best season in several years. A 1-0 win over Rivoli United in their last outing took them to 60 points from 30 league matches and cemented their place at the division’s summit. With just three games of the third and final stage of the campaign remaining, Arnett Gardens hold a comfortable six-point lead over second-placed city rivals Waterhouse FC. A place among the top four and a berth in the end-of-season play-offs was all but sealed several weeks ago, but the team that finishes top of the league after 33 games is usually guaranteed a favourable draw in the semi-fi nals. Arnett Gardens could even
be pitted against reigning champions Montego Bay United in a last-four clash worthy of the final itself. Matchday 30 was overshadowed somewhat by the exploits of the Jamaican national team, who recorded wins over Venezuela and Cuba in Montego Bay during the recent international week. The Reggae Boyz, who won the Caribbean Cup last year and are coached by German Winfried Schäfer, go into their qualifying campaign for the 2018 World Cup in Russia brimming with confidence. Not that Arnett Gardens have been distracted by the hullabaloo surrounding Schäfer’s side, which is made up almost entirely of overseas players. Instead, they remained focused on beating Rivoli United at the Spaulding Sports Complex. Sure enough, Michaelos Martin scored the only goal of the contest right at the start of the second half to extend the league leaders’ winning run and keep alive their dream of securing the fourth league title in the club’s history, and their first in 13 years.
2001 and 2002 under the stewardship of head coach Jerome Waite. It is perhaps symbolic that Waite, who is affectionately known as ‘Jerry’ by the majority of football fans in Jamaica, is at the helm once more after rejoining the club for a third time in 2013. Waite had been dismissed in 2008 after losing the first four games of the league season. However, since taking over the hot seat again in October 2013, he appears to have rediscovered the winning mentality that had been missing at the club. After losing narrowly to Waterhouse in last season’s play-off semifinal, Arnett Gardens have hit new heights and even set a new league record of ten successive victories earlier in the campaign. A few weeks ago, Waite was named Star Coach of Round Two of the Jamaican Premier League – an impressive achievement, but Waite is hoping that was just the beginning of this season’s success story. After all, his side are saving their best for the play-offs. Å
Arnett Gardens were a dominant force in Jamaican football at the turn of the millen nium, winning successive national titles in
Arnett Gardens march on Michaelos Martin (centre) scores the winner in his side’s 1-0 win over Rivoli United. T H E F I FA W E E K LY
15
Developing football everywhere and for all
Organising inspiring tournaments
Caring about society and the environment
For the Game. For the World. FIFA is committed to developing football for the benefit of all. Our mission is to: Develop the game FIFA’s primary objective is to develop the game of football in our 209 member associations. The FIFA World Cup™ gives us the resources we need to invest USD 550,000 per day in football development across the globe. Touch the world FIFA’s aim is to touch the world through its international football competitions and events, uniting and inspiring people everywhere.
FIFA.com
Build a better future Football is much more than just a game. Its universal appeal gives it a unique power and reach which must be managed carefully. FIFA believes it has a duty to society that goes beyond football.
C A N A DA 2015
PRESIDENTIAL NOTE
Match officials from 49 countries The football continent
“I Preparing for action in Canada French referee Stephanie Frappart.
Ronny Hartmann / Bongarts / Getty Images
T
he FIFA Referees Committee, under the chairmanship of Jim Boyce (Northern Ireland), has appointed 22 referees, 7 support referees (one of them local), and 44 assistant referees representing 49 different countries for this summer's Women’s World Cup. FIFA has implemented a comprehensive programme to ensure that the referees for this very important competition will be in peak condition come 6 June. Just as it did for the 24 participating teams, the road to the Women’s World Cup began for an initial group of referees and assistant referees from all over the world in September 2012, when FIFA took the important decision to create a women’s refereeing project. One of the key objectives was match control and consequently to prepare this group of prospective referees for the 2015 Women’s World Cup. The referees selected for the tournament in Canada have been chosen based especially on their personality and their quality in terms of football understanding by being able to read the game and the teams’ tactical approaches towards each match. Between now and 6 June, the selected group of match officials will participate in two seminars: one in Zurich from 18 to 24 April and the other in Vancouver ten days before the kick-off of the Women’s World Cup 2015, at which the identities of the referees and the support referees will be decided. The selected referees and assistant referees will be observed and monitored regularly during this period, and FIFA is ready to give them all the support they need so that they can prepare for this important tournament in the best possible manner. Å tfw
Visit http://tinyurl.com/ojt7wrc for the full referees’ list
t is better to reach your destination in three leaps than to take one and break your leg.” The proverb of the Mandinka people accurately sums up the development of the game in Africa. It took a relatively long time to establish a solid foundation for African football. With the exception of Egypt in 1934, no Confederation Africaine de Football (CAF) nation contested the World Cup finals until 1970. Four years later Zaire became the first sub-Saharan country to qualify for the tournament. Nowadays the pulse of African football is so strong that the major European and Asian leagues would be far worse off without it. Thanks to their huge reservoir of talent, the African clubs and a ssociations make a crucial contribution to the attractiveness of global football. When we travel to Cairo for the CAF Congress next week, we must show African football all the great appreciation and respect it deserves. The refreshing skills and technical finesse of the African teams are among the greatest attractions at the World Cup. In Brazil last year the continent was represented in the last sixteen by two teams for the very first time, reflecting the upward trend. Credit for this development must also go to CAF president Issa Hayatou. Using strategic wisdom and sure instinct in the world of sports politics, he has succeeded in keeping this vast continent together in all its linguistic, ethnic and cultural diversity. The power of football is arguably even more significant in Africa than the rest of the world, because it symbolises a common denominator for all peoples, nations and tribes. Or as they say in Africa: “If you are in one boat, you have to row together.”
Best wishes, Sepp Blatter T H E F I FA W E E K LY
17
C O U N T D OW N T O C A N A DA 2015: 65 DAY S T O G O
Tough challenge Christine Manie holds off England’s Kelly Smith.
With excitement growing ahead of the Women’s World Cup, the Hyundai Young Player trophy has now been unveiled. The accolade was first awarded by FIFA’s Technical Study Group at the 2006 World Cup in Germany. The exceptional performances of players born on or after 1 January 1995 will be recognised at this summer’s competition in Canada. In both men’s and women’s football, the award has served as an important motivational link between the senior World Cups and FIFA’S age-category tournaments. Many outstanding candidates are set to compete for the prize, with a shortlist of three players being put forward after the semi-finals before the winner is announced after the final on 5 July. 18
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
Australia’s Caitlin Foord was the first female recipient of the Hyundai Young Player Award back in 2011. Besides the age criteria, the FIFA Technical Study Group will also consider the following factors in determining the Hyundai Young Player Award winner: – Exceptional level of skill – Invigorating and youthful style of play – Creativity and inspiration – Tactical maturity and effectiveness – Fan recognition through impressive performances – Potential to be role model for young footballers – Positive attitude and advocate for Fair Play
Julian Finney / Getty Images
Skills, creativity and fair play - recognising the world’s best young player
65 DAYS TO GO Cameroon’s goalscoring defender aiming for more history The Cameroon women’s national team have only qualified for the finals of a major global tournament twice, and one player made a crucial contribution on both occasions - Christine Manie.
C
ameroon qualified for Canada 2015 courtesy of Christine Manie’s dramatic winner in the 118th minute of her side’s semi-final against Côte d’Ivoire at the 2014 African Women’s Championship. Three years earlier, the defender scored an equally important goal in the final round of qualifying for the 2012 Olympic Games against Nigeria. Despite their historic importance to women’s football in Cameroon, for Manie her two goals are of little importance. “Football is a team game, and as captain of the team, you have to take your responsibilities,” she said. “Against Nigeria, I took the penalty kick as I am in charge of the penalty kicks. Everyone trusts me, players as well as coaches. Against Côte d’Ivoire it was a corner kick, and I headed the ball home. Scoring is not only a striker’s responsibility.” If everything goes according to plan, Manie will wear the armband in Canada. “Being the captain of this team is a matter of pride, all the more as it’s the first time Cameroon has qualified for the World Cup. It is a feeling that is difficult to convey. It is a great achievement for us, one that became possible because we believed in ourselves. There are players who have a very big career but never play in the World Cup. So it is a privilege for us.” Taking on world champions Japan The Cameroonians may not have it easy as they step onto the world stage to face some of the best women’s sides in the world, and they face stiff competition from Japan, Ecuador and Switzerland in Group C. “The World Cup
is a very tough and demanding tournament. We’re not talking about the African championships here. All the teams in our group are very good, especially defending champions Japan. All we can do is work, as work pays off in the end.” Manie’s side will also be facing a German-speaking team for the first time when they take on Switzerland. Cameroon’s involvement at the Olympics was disappointing. They lost all three matches, conceding 11 goals and scoring just one. But Manie thinks that experience will point the way forward in Canada. “It was the first time Cameroon took part in the Olympic Games. In spite of our failure, it was great for us. We learned so many lessons.” It is not surprising that Manie is not fearful of facing Japan as she is not averse to taking on challenges. “I started playing football in boys’ teams when I was seven or eight. It was not very competitive then. I played after school, but when I was older, my parents struggled to pay for my education and I decided to focus on football.”
one of the only foreign ones. It is true Romania is far from my country and my family, but I chose to do this job, one that can bring you to every corner of the world. For the moment, I play in Romania, I don’t know where I will play next. Only God decides.” Å
African Football Media
Life in Romania Manie joined a club playing in the top league in Cameroon, but kept on dreaming of playing overseas. That dream materialised when she signed a contract with Romanians CFF Olimpia Cluj a few years ago. She has since gone on to win the Romanian league and cup and competed in the UEFA Women’s Champions League. “I am the only black player in Romania, and T H E F I FA W E E K LY
19
First Love
20
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
Place: Portobelo, Panama Date: 12 December 2013 T i m e : 9. 0 2 a . m . Photog rapher: Ludov ic Maisant
laif T H E F I FA W E E K LY
21
LIECHTENSTEIN
Gearing up The Liechtenstein squad prior to a training session.
We do the best we can 22
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
LIECHTENSTEIN
Liechtenstein Football Association T h e L F V w a s f o u n d e d i n 19 3 4 b y F C S c h a a n , F C B a l z e r s , F C Tr i e s e n a n d FC Vaduz. USV E schen -Mauren joined in 19 5 4 , F C R u g g e l l i n 19 5 8 , a n d F C Tr i e s e n b e r g i n 19 7 2 . T h e c l u b s c o m p e t e i n t h e Swiss league system, with FC Vaduz playing in the top -f light Super League. The association has st aged the Liechten s t e i n C u p s i n c e 19 4 6 a n d i s a p a r t n e r association of the E ast Swit zerland r e g i o n a l F A (O F V ) . T h e L F V h a s b e e n a m e m b e r o f F I F A a n d U E F A s i n c e 19 74 . T h e c o u n t r y ’s f i r s t f u l l i n t e r n a t i o n a l w a s a 1- 0 defeat to Swit zerland in Balzers b a c k i n 19 8 2 .
FIFA in Liechtenstein The FIFA GOAL programme provided US$400,000 in mid -2003 to suppor t the construction of the LF V headquar ters in Vaduz. The FIFA Financial Assist ance Programme invested a fur ther U S $ 2 , 0 5 0 , 0 0 0 b e t w e e n 2 0 10 a n d 2 0 14 . Five hundred adidas balls were provided b e t w e e n 2 0 0 3 a n d 2 0 10 .
Liechtenstein boasts only a handful of professional players but plans are afoot to change that, reports Perikles Monioudis from Vaduz. Martin Mischkulnig, photos
T
he compact Rheinpark Stadium in the national capital was full to capacity. A crowd of 6,127 braved a soaking wet night in Vaduz to watch the meeting with neighbours Austria. Chants, songs, a sea of red and white, it was the visiting fans who supplied the audio track for this particular EURO 2016 Group G qualifier. They came expecting the team coached by Swiss supremo Marcel Koller to win big, and some travelled a fair way too, from Vienna, Graz and other Austrian cities. However, a few of them had only made a very short journey of a dozen kilometres or so. These are the Austrians who live in an established and recognised region comprising themselves, Liechtenstein’s 40,000 or so inhabitants and the adjacent
Swiss communities. The multi-national territory is bound together by cross-border public transportation and a single market, geographically encased by towering limestone mountains. A water feature is provided by the Rhine which rises in Switzerland and whose tributaries and delta extend all the way to the Netherlands and the North Sea. This truly continental river runs alongside the Rheinpark Stadium in Vaduz before winding its way onwards through nine countries. Upping the pace The neighbours have much in common, but not on the football pitch. The match between the patently unequal teams ended 5-0 to the Austrians, the T H E F I FA W E E K LY
23
LIECHTENSTEIN
Record holder Captain Mario Frick has 119 caps.
group leaders with a squad comprising top-class overseas-based players and who lie 23rd in the FIFA Ranking, exactly 100 places above the home team. Liechtenstein resisted sternly for quarter of an hour before inevitably starting to struggle. The national team composed mainly of amateurs simply ran out of strength as the minutes ticked by, a typical pattern when part-timers take on well-trained, physically honed pros. Liechtenstein coach René Pauritsch spent a couple of years in charge of the U-21s before stepping up to the seniors in 2013. Interviewed behind the stadium long after the final whistle, the 51-year-old Austrian was asked whether he felt “doing the best you can” was an appropriate description of his team's efforts. Or could that be seen as patronising? “No, it’s appropriate. We want to hang on in there as best we can, we want to keep the ball as best we can, and play our football as best we can. Some days it goes well, other days less so.” The biggest difference compared to the professional teams is pace. “We’re not accustomed to the high-speed rhythm so we lose possession. We’re half a yard short and a lot less nimble in the tackle.” The target set by the coach and endorsed by the Lichtenstein FA (LFV) is to bring as many professional players as possible into the national squad. 24
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
Safe pair of hands Keeper Peter Jehle honed his skills in Portugal.
The current group incudes Mario Frick, the team captain who is still turning out for the principality at the age of 40. The country’s most-capped player with 119 appearances, he was not always a centre-back with great vision and range: he actually spent most of his career at the other end of the field going for goal. He played 110 times in Serie A in four campaigns with Hellas Verona and most productively with AC Siena, scoring against some of the biggest names in Italian club football. Nowadays he is back home with his very first club FC Balzers where he is a player-coach in the Swiss fourth division. Since 1933 the principality’s clubs have competed in the Swiss leagues, with FC Vaduz currently playing in the top-flight Super League. “I come from a large family and we kids always had a ball at our feet, kicking around in the garden,” Frick recalled. “I trained on Tuesdays and Thursdays with the Balzers youth section. I was only 16 when they put me in the first team and I scored lots of goals, which got the Swiss professional clubs interested.” Nowadays, the principality’s footballing infrastructure is very good. The association is highly proactive and its teams compete internationally, “but it’s still become more difficult for the youths
Qualifying round UEFA Euro 2016 Group G
1 2 3 4 5 6
Team Austria Sweden Russia Montenegro Liechtenstein Moldova
MP 5 5 4 4 5 5
W 4 2 1 1 1 0
D 1 3 2 2 1 1
L 0 0 1 1 3 4
Pts 13 9 5 5 4 1
29 March 2015
LIECHTENSTEIN
to turn pro,” according to Frick. “There are far more exceptional talents in the region than there were before, and they’ve been brought on outstandingly. The competition is fierce.” However, the veteran feels there is too much pressure to perform, too early: “I actually think it’s a problem that players are supposed to be top-class as early as possible.” Frick is in his 23rd season with the national team. His goal is to coach professionally and one day step up to the Liechtenstein hot seat. He recently acquired his A-licence and supervises seven internationals at Balzers, where he also looks after the youth section. What a feeling The Liechtenstein defence includes another pillar of the national set-up, FC Vaduz’s Franz Burgmeier, who is approaching his 33rd birthday and once won the Swiss Cup with FC Basel. Last November he netted a direct free-kick to secure a 1-0 win away in Moldova in EURO 2016 qualifying. “It was a unique feeling,” Burgmeier said, “especially because it proved enough to win. It meant we finally won a qualifier again, something we’d not done for many years.” Burgmeier took up the game when he was four and played for FC Triesen as a boy. “I was one of the smallest but a better footballer than the others,” the 1.77 metre man recalled. At 18 he moved to Vaduz, then plying their trade in the Swiss second division. “My footballing education was good, but I was never a big star for our representative teams. As a young man I had the desire to travel far and wide with the team and sacrifice a day off, even if I ended up not getting a game.”
Solid rearguard Franz Burgmeier is indispensable in Liechtenstein’s defence.
“Our target is to increase the number of professionals” René Pauritsch
Dynamic development Women’s football is a priority for the LFV. T H E F I FA W E E K LY
25
sharecocacola.com #shareacocacola
Coca-Cola and the contour bottle are registered trademarks of the Coca-Cola Company.
Share a with
LIECHTENSTEIN
Burgmeier’s dedication saw him feature for three Super League clubs and has earned him 91 caps. “Our matches are often David against Goliath, although looking at it the other way round we have nothing to lose,” he reflected. “The target we set for ourselves is to maintain a higher tempo than in the league. Representing your country is a privilege.” Could Liechtenstein ever break into the world top 100? “Now that’s a very ambitious target,” laughed Burgmeier. His career includes one remarkable chapter: he is the first Liechtensteiner ever to play in England, as he spent 2008/9 with fourth-tier Darlington. “I really felt the passion for football in the stadiums there,” he said. The adventure began in an unusual way: “I was discovered by the chairman’s 12-year-old grandson when he watched our EURO qualifier against England at Old Trafford. I’m still in touch with him and the family today.” Elite ambitions Keeper Peter Jehle is the third seasoned pro in the current squad. The 33-year-old’s CV includes six seasons with Grasshoppers Zurich and two with Boavista Porto, where his acrobatic reactions earned him first-choice status. After the club was compulsorily relegated in the wake of a corruption scandal, and following a season with French second division outfit Tours, Jehle came home and joined FC Vaduz. “As kids my brother and I played non-stop on the patch of grass in front of our house. I started with FC Schaan and decided I wanted to play professionally very early on. Fortunately, the LVF was working very hard at the time on an elite youth development programme. I was one of the first to benefit from it and enjoyed professional support.” The concept involved gathering the best of the talented youngsters from the region, including the Swiss and Austrian border zones, and placing them under a pro coach. ‘Team Liechtenstein’ competed in the Swiss U-16 championship. The LFV currently fields teams at the U-18, U-16 and U-15 levels with development squads for 14 and 13-year-olds. Jehle is currently enrolled with the FIFPro Online Academy and is studying sports management. He believes a bright future lies ahead for football in Liechtenstein. Getting from school to the training ground takes a matter of minutes, and the presence of vocational training colleges and a University could add to the attraction of the location, he feels. Jehle has never forgotten the words of his mother: “You have to let the kids dream.” The principality has already produced one golden generation. Jehle, Burgmeier and Frick were already involved back in 2004 when the national team boasted 14 professionals and took a point off EURO 2004 runners-up Portugal in a 2-2 World Cup qualifying draw. The current campaign has yielded four points so far from the victory in Moldova and a draw in Montenegro. The principality’s footballing family would be anything but dissatisfied should Frick and his men end up with a total of eight. One point at a time, doing the best they can. Å
Rooting for the home team Liechtenstein fans have realistic expectations.
In it together Pros and amateurs fight for points side-by-side.
The stage is set The Rheinpark Stadium in Vaduz glistening in the rain. T H E F I FA W E E K LY
27
The British Ladies’ Football Club organised the first women’s match at Crouch End Athletic Ground.
Caps and knickerbockers
W
omen’s football has grown exponentially over the past few decades, but its roots are far from s hallow, with the first official match dating back to 23 March 1895. Games had in fact been played as far back as the early 1880s, but for various reasons were not able to be classified as official fixtures. The meeting between North and South at Crouch End Athletic Ground in North London therefore goes down as the first. Despite the women’s game’s fledgling status, the match attracted a crowd that would delight many clubs today, with some reports calculating it in excess of 10,000. The Guardian’s match report told of many of the curious fans, intrigued by the opportunity to see women apply themselves to a game largely seen as a male pastime at this point, struggling to get an glimpse of the action A kit revolution “Very few of those present can have seen much of the game, for, except in the case of the favoured occupants of the small grand stand, the spectators had to stand on the flat
28
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
unbanked ground,” it reported. “As for the press writers, the small box provided would not hold a tenth of them.” The result ended a whopping 7-1 to the North, who were captained by Nettie Honeyball, founder of the British Ladies Football Club and the organiser of the game. The quality of the match came in for mixed reviews at best, but with the sides only a couple of months old and all largely new to the sport, that was hardly surprising. Two things were almost universally reported following the game. The first was the outstanding performance in goal by Mrs Graham for the North. The Standard described her display as “capital” and the Middlesbrough Daily Gazette said that “had she been on the other side matters might have been reversed”. The second was the infatuation with the idiosyncrasies of the kit they wore. Featuring blouses, caps and knickerbockers – a form of loose shorts often tied at the bottom – they were seen as something of a revolution as women had tended to wear long dresses even when competing in sport. “I can only say that the impression left on my mind by the afternoon’s play was that it was an extremely pretty
Popperfoto / Getty Images
The first officially-sanctioned women’s match took place in 1895. The game in London was an important milestone.
HISTORY
The North Winners of the milestone encounter in March 1895.
Mrs Graham The North’s highlypraised keeper.
Nettie Honeyball The North team’s captain.
sight,” The Guardian reflected – named only as ’a lady correspondent’ in what was a sign of the times over a century ago. “There is nothing ungraceful in a girl kicking a football when she has got rid of the skirts which make the action hideous.” The Manchester-based newspaper was optimistic about the future of women in sport, writing that “there is no reason why the game should not be annexed by women for their own use as a new and healthiful form of recreation.” However, in an example of the entrenched predjudice women had to face (and still often face even today), others were less than positive about the dawn of the female game. “They cannot and never will play football as it should be played,” was the Bristol Mercury and Daily Post’s verdict. “For our part we are glad that women cannot play football. Even were they capable of it, the game would be essentially unsuitable to their sex.”
The South On the end of a 7-1 defeat.
against bans and prejudice to climb to where it is today. When the Women’s World Cup is lifted in Canada on 5 July, the action there will be a direct result of this organised meeting in North London. Å Daniel Masters
A milestone This match stands as a significant milestone in a long journey in the timeline of the women’s game, which has fought T H E F I FA W E E K LY
29
Every dream needs a kick-off. Inspire her passion. Use your Visa Card to purchase tickets to the FIFA Women’s World Cup™.
FREE KICK
SPOTLIGHT ON
GENER AL INFORMATION Country: Denmark FIFA Trigramme: DEN Continent: Europe
Nine months later Sven Goldmann
C
afu was recently in Germany for a few days, visiting the International Tourism Trade Show in Berlin as well as giving interviews and keeping other appointments. The two-time world champion is happy to be an ambassador for Brazil, promoting its global image in general and its football in particular. A Seleção’s reputation suffered somewhat in that regard at last year’s World Cup, and nine months have now passed since the humiliating 7-1 semi-final defeat against Germany in Belo Horizonte. “July 8 will always be a very special, very painful day for us Brazilians,” Cafu said. “But I refuse to reduce Brazilian football down to that one game. Brazil are much more than that.” Cafu is Marcos Evangelista de Moraes. He appeared in three consecutive World Cup finals between 1994 and 2002, a feat not even Pele achieved and he is eternally revered as a king by his compatriots, despite the country abolishing its monarchy 117 years ago. The nation is now trying to look to the future, although Cafu believes the past still has a bearing on things to come: “We’re still five-time world champions and not former-five-time world champions.” Indeed, Brazil’s enthusiasm for the game has continued unabated. At the end of March almost 70,000 fans poured into the Maracana stadium in Rio de Janeiro to watch the ’Clasico’ between Vasco da Gama and Flamengo. Despite it only being a regular match in the regional championship, they defied torrential rain to get there and made light of that fact that the country’s biggest stars have long since moved to Europe. Brazilians still love football then, in spite of the humbling experience in Belo Horizonte which Cafu described as surreal, “a game which
will only be repeated a hundred years from now, if at all”. As the writer and Cafu’s countryman Nelson Rodrigues said, football, more than any other game, shows that the impossible is possible. Cafu laughed when asked if the task of rebuilding Brazilian football was something that appealed to him. “No, I wouldn’t want to be a coach right now,” he said, pausing briefly. “Just look at how the Brazilian public treated Carlos Dunga. He was captain of the team that won the 1994 World Cup in the USA. He was a great player with character. Then when he was unsuccessful as coach at the 2010 World Cup, everyone forgot all that he’d achieved with Brazil. He was simply the man under whom Brazil were eliminated. I don’t want people to talk about me like that.” Dunga has since taken charge of the Selecao for a second time, leading the side to a remarkable series of eight successive victories since the World Cup and bringing in fresh faces such as Liverpool’s Coutinho and Hoffenheim’s Roberto Firmino. “Our problem at the 2014 World Cup was that we only had one star, namely Neymar,” said Cafu. “There used to be five or six players with that kind of quality in the national team. We need to get back to that and I’m optimistic we will do. Believe me, Brazil have a very bright future.” Å
Capital: Copenhagen
GEOGR APHIC INFORMATION Surface area: 43,094 km² Highest point: Yding Skovhoj 173m Neighbouring seas and oceans: North Sea, Baltic Sea
MEN’S FOOTBALL FIFA Ranking: 28th World Cup: 4 appearances 1986, 1998, 2002, 2010
WOMEN’S FOOTBALL FIFA Ranking: 15th World Cup: 4 appearances 1991, 1995, 1999, 2007
L ATES T RESULTS Men’s: Denmark - France 0:2 29 March 2015 Women’s: Norway - Denmark 5:2 11 March 2015
FIFA INVES TMENT The weekly column by our staff writers
Since 2005: $ 7,082,430 T H E F I FA W E E K LY
31
MIRROR IMAGE
T
H
E
N
Derby, England
1963
Interfoto
A kickabout in the park.
32
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
MIRROR IMAGE
N
O
W
Philippsburg, Germany
2012
Gustavo Alabiso / Visum
MSC Philippsburg play host to MSC Ubstadt-Weiher.
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
33
© 2014 adidas AG. adidas, the 3-Bars logo and the 3-Stripes mark are registered trademarks of the adidas Group.
THERE WILL BE ATERS
NET ZER KNOWS!
Who was your idol? And did you have a career Plan B? Question from Timo Jurgens / Shayne Hogan (via Twitter)
QUOTES OF THE WEEK
“I’d do anything for them. I’d make their teas and coffees, even silly things like sit on the toilet to make the seat warm for them in the cold winter days at the training ground. I used to clean Dennis Wise’s boots and he wanted them perfect, so I took really good care of them.” John Terry on his early days at Chelsea
“It’s ruthless. You come in and as a foreigner, it’s not the same banter. They’ll say, ‘you big head’, and you deal with it. Then I’ll go to Joe Hart and say, ‘You giraffe neck’ (laughs). It breaks the ice.” Vincent Kompany (Manchester City) on the banter in English football
Hard landing Gunter Netzer in the 1972 European Championship final. West Germany beat the USSR 3-0.
Sven Simon / ullstein
I’
m afraid I have to disappoint you when it comes to the first question, as I never had an idol. Of course I marvelled at talented footballers such as Fritz Walter, but I never had an idol in the role model sense. What’s more, I was only ten years old when children across Germany were celebrating the 1954 World Cup triumph, so I never fully appreciated the scale of that achievement. Despite all this, I think it’s important for people to have heroes, as they are inspiring and motivating and give fans a feeling of stability. Sporting figures in particular represent their clubs and are ultimately the reason people go to watch games – along with the attraction of watching a football match of course. Now on to the second question. If you talk about a Plan B, it implies that you had a Plan A that failed. Although I never had a serious Plan A, everything worked out the way I had hoped in the end. Having said that, it wouldn’t have been the end of the world for me if my footballing career hadn’t worked out. I should
add that my parents insisted that I finished my training to become an industrial clerk, and of course I did. So if I hadn’t been able to enjoy a career in football, I probably would have gone down that route instead. Å
“Raheem Sterling, one-thousand per cent. He has got zero rhythm. Studge put a video up of him and Jordon Ibe dancing, and Raheem was at the start of the video having a go. That pretty much sums up his rhythm – it’s non-existent!” Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain (Arsenal) on the worst dancer in the England squad
“What can I do about it? Should I just dig myself into the ground and give up playing football?” Lukas Podolski (Inter Milan) reacts to his critics
What have you always wanted to know about football? Ask Gunter Netzer: feedback-theweekly@fifa.org
“If I continue to develop well and stay healthy, I would like, in the next few years, to hold the Ballon d’Or in my hands. I am convinced that it can happen. I’m a world champion and I play at a top club in the Premier League. Mesut Ozil (Arsenal) T H E F I FA W E E K LY
35
FIFA PARTNER
TURNING POINT
“The husky dogs changed my life” Former German international Birgit Wiese’s decision to emigrate helped her to fulfil a lifelong dream of owning husky dogs inside the Arctic Circle.
Andreas Nilsson
I
made the decision to be the first female German footballer to move to Sweden – up in the far north, with its long winters and endless snow – a long time ago for one simple reason: my love of husky dogs. The climate in Germany is simply too mild for them, so I had to find a way to combine dogs with football as there was no way I was going to give up the sport. I think that is entirely understandable for someone who has won multiple German championships and DFB Cups and has been able to represent their country on five occasions. I had already faced all kinds of uncertainty, unusual paths and risks during my career for the sake of playing football. After playing for the girls’ team at SV Schashagen, a small village club in Schleswig Holstein, the first senior side I joined was the women’s team at ATSV Stockelsdorf. From there I moved on to what was then Germany’s biggest club, TSV Siegen, where as the sweeper I organised both the defence and our build-up play. I was called up to the national team in my first year there, and made my international debut in a 10-0 win against Switzerland. But when it came to the issue of huskies, I wavered back and forth about whether I would be strong enough to relocate to Sweden. I had received an offer via friends to go to Ostersund after interest from Froso, the Division 1 North club based there. I accepted, and lived from then on with my then boyfriend and several huskies in a house in the forest, surrounded by magnificent nature that gave new meaning to words such as ‘vastness’ and ‘freedom’. Sledding with the dogs in winter and walking them in summer provided me with a very special kind of fitness training. After a year my career took me even further north to Umea. At that point UIK were on the
brink of becoming a major force in women’s football, having won promotion to the country’s top flight for the first time in 1995, and have since lifted the UEFA Women’s Champions League trophy twice. After arriving at the club I became the midfield engine, free from the tactical constraints that had increasingly limited my development and creativity during my time at Siegen. It was in Umea that I also met the man who is now my husband, and we moved to southern Sweden for a while after a knee injury forced me to retire from compe titive football. We have since headed north again and now live in a small village near Umea on the Baltic coast. I coached my daughter Iza’s youth team along the way, and she is now trying to break through with recently promoted third-tier side IFK Akullsjon. My son and our two dogs complete our family unit. Å As told to Rainer Hennies
Name Birgit Wiese Date and place of birth 10 November 1965, Berlin Position Defender Clubs played for 1988–1991 TSV Siegen 1992 Tennis Borussia Berlin 1993 SSG Bergisch Gladbach 1994 Froso IF 1995–1997 Umea IK Germany national team 5 caps
In Turning Point, personalities reflect on a decisive moment in their lives. T H E F I FA W E E K LY
37
MEN’S WORLD R ANKING
Germany (unchanged) Italy (10th, up 2 ranks) Spain (11th, down 1 rank) 7 Barbados, Bermuda, Grenada, St Vincent and the Grenadines (2 matches each) Israel (up 75 points) Barbados, Bermuda (up 11 ranks each) Lebanon (down 90 points) Lebanon (down 25 ranks)
Leader Moves into top ten Moves out of top ten Matches played in total Most matches played Biggest move by points Biggest move by ranks Biggest drop by points Biggest drop by ranks Rank Team
+/- Points
Rank Team
+/- Points
Rank Team
+/- Points
Last updated: 12 March 2015
Rank Team
+/- Points
1 Germany
0 1770
55 South Africa
1
608
109 Qatar
0
300
163 Swaziland
2
106
2 Argentina
0 1577
56 Korea Republic
-2
594
110 Sudan
2
288
164 Belize
3
100
3 Colombia
0 1499
56 Turkey
-4
594
110 Cuba
4
288
164 Tahiti
3
100
4 Belgium
0 1471
58 Egypt
-1
582
112 Libya
1
281
166 Guyana
0
94
5 Netherlands
0 1415
59 Peru
0
565
113 Namibia
-2
277
167 Guam
-5
93
6 Brazil
0 1348
60 Zambia
0
560
114 Niger
4
271
168 Gambia
1
90
7 Portugal
0 1191
61 Panama
0
557
115 Mauritania
8
268
169 Bermuda
11
89
8 France
0 1180
61 Albania
2
557
116 Canada
1
266
170 Pakistan
1
88
9 Uruguay
0 1164
63 Trinidad and Tobago
-1
553
117 Liberia
-2
264
170 Laos
-9
88
10 Italy
2 1146
64 Rwanda
8
550
118 Kenya
-2
263
172 Montserrat
-2
86
11 Spain
-1 1130
65 Australia
-2
549
119 St Vincent and the Grenadines
-9
260
173 India
-2
74
12 Switzerland
-1 1126
66 Republic of Ireland
1
537
120 Lesotho
5
257
174 Sri Lanka
-1
73
13 Costa Rica
0 1095
67 Montenegro
-2
531
121 St Kitts and Nevis
-2
244
175 Yemen
4
72
14 Romania
2 1081
68 Burkina Faso
0
529
122 Moldova
-1
243
176 Turks and Caicos Islands
0
66
15 Chile
-1 1057
69 United Arab Emirates
-3
523
123 Liechtenstein
7
238
177 Comoros
-3
64
16 Czech Republic
1 1045
70 Norway
-1
522
124 Zimbabwe
-5
237
178 Seychelles
-1
60
17 England
-2 1031
71 Bulgaria
-1
501
125 Kuwait
3
231
179 São Tomé e Príncipe
-5
58
18 Algeria
0
986
72 Uzbekistan
-1
483
126 Georgia
0
225
180 Nepal
0
57
19 Croatia
0
963
72 Venezuela
7
483
126 Burundi
-2
225
181 San Marino
-1
55
20 Côte d’Ivoire
0
944
74 Uganda
2
478
128 Aruba
4
221
181 Cambodia
3
55
21 Mexico
0
935
75 Togo
0
466
128 Philippines
4
221
181 Dominica
-1
55
22 Slovakia
0
932
76 Jamaica
3
463
130 Vietnam
2
220
184 Solomon Islands
0
53 51
23 Austria
0
916
77 Haiti
1
454
131 Barbados
11
218
185 Nicaragua
-8
24 Ghana
1
887
78 Finland
-5
450
132 St Lucia
8
216
185 Timor-Leste
2
51
25 Tunisia
1
881
79 Armenia
-5
437
133 Maldives
2
214
187 Macau
1
45
26 Israel
6
880
80 Paraguay
-1
434
134 New Zealand
2
211
188 Chinese Taipei
-4
43
27 Greece
-3
872
81 Honduras
-4
433
134 Guinea-Bissau
4
211
188 South Sudan
1
43
28 Denmark
0
863
82 Guatemala
0
425
136 Luxembourg
-7
209
190 Mauritius
0
36
29 Ecuador
0
852
83 China PR
-1
423
137 Afghanistan
7
203
191 Vanuatu
0
34
30 Bosnia and Herzegovina
0
841
84 Angola
0
403
138 Kazakhstan
1
199
192 Fiji
0
30
31 Ukraine
-4
838
85 Cyprus
4
398
139 Azerbaijan
-8
198
192 Samoa
0
30
32 USA
-1
828
86 Mozambique
4
385
140 Palestine
-14
194
194 Bahamas
1
26
33 Russia
0
788
87 Estonia
-2
379
141 Tajikistan
-4
192
195 Mongolia
-1
25
34 Poland
6
778
87 Sierra Leone
-1
379
142 Thailand
1
189
196 Tonga
0
17
35 Iceland
2
776
89 El Salvador
-2
378
143 Central African Republic
2
178
197 US Virgin Islands
0
16
36 Senegal
0
772
89 Morocco
-1
378
144 Turkmenistan
3
175
198 Brunei Darussalam
0
15
37 Wales
-3
763
91 Malawi
2
376
145 Malta
4
168
199 Papua New Guinea
0
13
38 Cape Verde Islands
-3
761
92 Bolivia
0
372
146 Lebanon
-25
164
200 American Samoa
0
12
39 Scotland
-1
727
92 Benin
3
372
147 Madagascar
1
163
201 Andorra
0
8
40 Serbia
-1
709
94 Lithuania
2
364
148 Chad
-2
155
201 British Virgin Islands
1
8
41 Nigeria
1
701
95 Latvia
5
361
149 Korea DPR
3
149
201 Eritrea
1
8
42 Iran
-1
692
96 Oman
-5
356
150 Kyrgyzstan
1
146
204 Somalia
0
6
43 Northern Ireland
8
679
97 Iraq
-3
353
151 New Caledonia
2
143
205 Cayman Islands
0
5
44 Guinea
-1
669
98 Belarus
3
346
152 Syria
-2
141
206 Djibouti
0
4
45 Sweden
-1
663
99 Saudi Arabia
-1
339
153 Myanmar
-12
137
206 Cook Islands
0
4
46 Hungary
2
659
100 Tanzania
7
331
153 Singapore
3
137
208 Anguilla
0
2
47 Congo DR
-1
651
101 Jordan
-4
326
153 Malaysia
1
137
209 Bhutan
0
0
48 Slovenia
-1
649
102 Antigua and Barbuda
-3
325
156 Indonesia
2
129
49 Cameroon
-4
646
102 Ethiopia
0
325
157 Hong Kong
2
127
50 Equatorial Guinea
-1
630
104 Bahrain
-1
319
158 Grenada
-3
126
51 Mali
2
626
105 Faroe Islands
0
317
159 Curaçao
1
125
52 Congo
-3
625
106 Botswana
-1
316
160 Puerto Rico
2
119
53 Japan
2
617
107 Dominican Republic
1
310
161 Suriname
3
115
54 Gabon
4
610
108 FYR Macedonia
-4
308
162 Bangladesh
-5
112
38
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
http://www.fifa.com/worldranking/index.html
PUZZLE
Published weekly by the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA)
President Joseph S. Blatter
1
1 6
Secretary General Jérôme Valcke
3 1
Director of Communications and Public Affairs Walter De Gregorio
3
5
8 5
7
1
2
8
5
4
3
4 4
3
3 6
7 1
6
3 5
2 9
8
4
9 9
8 4
4
2
1 Contributors to this Issue Rainer Hennies, Daniel Masters, Lisa Schneider
8
6
5
8
9
Editorial Assistants Alissa Rosskopf, Honey Thaljieh
8 6
Production Hans-Peter Frei
3
7
3 9
7
Project Management Bernd Fisa, Christian Schaub
2
4
9 7
5
6
1
6
8
5
1
9
8
HARD
3
Printer Zofinger Tagblatt AG
8
Contact feedback-theweekly@fifa.org
Any views expressed in The FIFA Weekly do not necessarily reflect those of FIFA.
1
MEDIUM
Contributors Ronald Dueker, Luigi Garlando, Sven Goldmann, Andreas Jaros, Jordi Punti, Thomas Renggli, David Winner, Roland Zorn
Reproduction of photos or articles in whole or in part is only permitted with prior editorial approval and if attributed “The FIFA Weekly, © FIFA 2015”. The editor and staff are not obliged to publish unsolicited manuscripts and photos. FIFA and the FIFA logo are registered trademarks of FIFA. Made and printed in Switzerland.
8
8
Proof Reader Nena Morf (Lead), Martin Beran, Kristina Rotach
Internet www.fifa.com/theweekly
9
6
Art Direction Catharina Clajus
Translation www.sportstranslations.com
8
2
Staff Writers Alan Schweingruber (Deputy Editor), Sarah Steiner
Layout Richie Kroenert (Lead), Tobias Benz, Susanne Egli
7
2
Chief Editor Perikles Monioudis
Picture Editor Peggy Knotz, Andres Wilhelm (Deputy)
3
EASY
1
3
9
7
4
9 7
8
6
1 4
2
4
1
3
5 8
4
9
7
T H E F I FA W E E K LY
Puzzles courtesy: opensky.ca/sudoku
Publisher FIFA, FIFA-Strasse 20, PO box, CH-8044 Zurich Phone +41-(0)43-222 7777, Fax +41-(0)43-222 7878
The objective of Sudoku is to fill a 9x9 grid with digits so that each of the numbers from 1 to 9 appears exactly once in each column, row and 3x3 sub-grid.
39
R E S U LT S O F PR E V I O U S P O L L
T HIS WEEK’S POLL
Which UEFA Champions League quarter-final will be the most exciting?
Which of these former champions will go furthest at this year’s FIFA U-20 World Cup?
52+41+43 1000 79 6 4% 3%
Source: Fifa.com
41%
52%
≠ Paris Saint-Germain - Barcelona ≠ Atletico Madrid - Real Madrid ≠ Juventus - Monaco ≠ Porto - Bayern Munich
· Argentina · Brazil · Portugal · Ghana · Germany
Cast your votes at: FIFA.com/newscentre
years without an international goal was the run that came to a long-awaited end for Scotland’s Steven Fletcher against Gibraltar. Then, having ended his drought, the Sunderland striker went on to make history, becoming the first Scottish player to score a hattrick in 46 years.
goals was the landmark reached by Australia in their 2-2 friendly draw with Germany. Captain Mile Jedinak was the man responsible for the landmark strike, curling home a superb free-kick in Kaiserslautern to edge the Socceroos 2-1 ahead.
seconds was all the time Harry Kane needed to mark his international debut with a goal. The Tottenham Hotspur striker scored with his second touch as a senior England player, this after coming off the bench to replace Wayne Rooney in a 4-0 UEFA EURO 2016 qualifying win over Lithuania.
AFP, Getty Images (3)
WEEK IN NUMBERS