NATIONAL TEAM - SWITZERLAND - 2014 WORLD CUP - Goodbye, Ottmar Hitzfeld. All the best and take care.

Hitzfeld has made a positive impression wherever he has been stationed and his name is still regularly chanted in the stands at Bayern Munich.

“He put together a really good team that will last for many years to come,” Granit Xhaka told FIFA.com, before Josip Drmic added: “He’s done a great job.” 

2 Jul 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - DAY 19 - LAST SIXTEEN - ARGENTINA VS SWITZERLAND 1:0

LAST SIXTEEN
1st July 2014

Argentina vs Switzerland 1:0

1 Jul 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - DAY 19 - LAST SIXTEEN - BELGIUM VS USA 2:1

LAST SIXTEEN
1st July 2014

Belgium vs USA 2:1

1 Jul 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - ARGENTINA - KEY PLAYER - ‪LIONEL MESSI - PROFILE

Lionel Andrés Messi; born 24 June 1987, is an Argentine footballer who plays as a forward for Spanish club FC Barcelona and the Argentina national team. He serves as the captain of his country's national football team.

By the age of 21, Messi had received Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year nominations. The following year, in 2009, he won his first Ballon d'Or and FIFA World Player of the Year awards. 

1 Jul 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - USA - KEY PLAYER - ‪JERMAINE JONES - PROFILE

Jermaine Junior Jones, born 3 November 1981, is a German-American footballer who plays as a defensive midfielder for Turkish club Beşiktaş. He has previously played for Eintracht Frankfurt, Bayer Leverkusen, Blackburn Rovers and Schalke 04. He was born in Germany and represented them at U21 and senior level.

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NATIONAL TEAM - NIGERIA - COACH - STEPHEN KESHI RESIGNS AFTER EXIT

He becomes the sixth manager to leave his job during the World Cup, following the departures of Honduras's Luis Suarez, Iran's Carlos Queiroz, Japan's Alberto Zaccheroni, Italy's Cesare Prandelli and Ivory Coast's Sabri Lamouchi.

Keshi, who captained Nigeria at the 1994 World Cup finals, was previously in charge of Mali and Togo.

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2014 WORLD CUP - DAY 18 - LAST SIXTEEN - FRANCE vs NIGERIA 2:0

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30th June 2014

France vs Nigeria 2:0

30 Jun 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - DAY 18 - LAST SIXTEEN - GERMANY vs ALGERIA 2:1

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30th June 2014

Germany vs Algeria 2:1

30 Jun 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - GERMANY - KEY PLAYER - THOMAS MUELLER‬ - PROFILE

Müller's role can be described as an attacking all-rounder, a player able to play in a variety of forward positions. He can play in any of the attacking midfield roles but usually plays in the center for Bayern Munich, and on the right for Germany.

He has been used as an out-and-out striker on occasion. Müller has been praised for his maturity, pace, technique, awareness and positioning.

30 Jun 2014
2014 WORLD CUP - FRANCE - KEY PLAYER - ‪KARIM BENZEMA - PROFILE

He has been named French Player of the Year twice for his performances in 2011 and 2012. Benzema is a former French youth international and has represented his nation from under-17 level onwards. 

Benzema has earned over 65 caps and represented France at three major international tournaments; the 2008 and 2012 editions of the UEFA European Football Championship and the 2014 FIFA World Cup.

30 Jun 2014

2015 AFRICA CUP - CONGO - COACHES - Claude LeRoy - French coach is African legend

Africa Cup 2015 GROUP A

 

Congo's qualification for the quarter-finals of the Africa Cup of Nations was a remarkable achievement for an unfancied side, but also a personal triumph for coach Claude LeRoy - one of the grand old men of African football.

He has coached at eight Cups of Nations and has now reached the quarter-finals on seven occasions, winning the trophy once.

 

TAKING CHARGE

LeRoy had an unspectacular playing career at a succession of middle-ranking French clubs before taking his first job in management at Amiens in 1980.

After five years in France, he was offered the post of Cameroon manager.
He jumped at the opportunity. 

"My father fought for the independence of former French colony Algeria," he explains. 

"That means as a kid I heard a lot about Africa and a different world.

"When I arrived, I was very, very young.

Some players were the same age as me, like Roger Milla and Theophile Abega.

"We left Cameroon for five weeks in Brazil and four weeks in Germany. 

We played one match in the Maracana.

"It was the beginning of a fantastic story, and a love story, first with Cameroon and then with Africa - and not only for me, for my wife and my daughters too. 

I don't know if it's a beautiful story for Africa but it's been a beautiful story for me."

 

LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS

Claude LeRoy took Senegal to the 1992 Africa Cup of Nations quarter-finals

LeRoy guided Cameroon to the Cup of Nations final in 1986, losing to Egypt on penalties, before going one better in the 1988 tournament in Morocco. 

His side won the trophy with a 1:0 victory over powerhouse Nigeria in the final.

LeRoy's next assignment was with Senegal, whom he steered to fourth place at the 1990 Cup of Nations, followed by a quarter-final exit in 1992.

Former Senegal player Salif Diao believes LeRoy's work laid the foundations for the country's subsequent success on the international stage.

"He did a great job in Senegal," Diao told BBC World Service's Sportsworld. 

"He set up a really great base, working with the youth.

"He had the team in 1992 and I would say 10 years later in 2002, when we finished second in the Africa Cup of Nations and reached the World Cup quarter-finals it was coming from the work he did."

Diao believes that LeRoy's insistence on living in the country he coaches, unlike many foreign managers, is key to his success.

"Africa is very mystical," he says. 

"You need to be there to understand all of it.

"It's not only about the game, you also have to know about the country, where you're going - the different ethnic groups because you have to know the different mentality of the players."


EUROPE'S OTHER AFRICAN JOURNEYMEN 

Germany's Otto Pfister:

Rwanda, Upper Volta (now Burkina Faso), Senegal, Ivory Coast, Zaire (now DR Congo), Ghana, Togo, Cameroon.

France's Henri Michel:

Cameroon, Morocco, Tunisia, Ivory Coast, Morocco, Kenya

Poland's Henryk Kasperczak:

Ivory Coast, Tunisia, Morocco, Mali, Senegal, Mali

France's Philippe Troussier:

Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, South Africa, Morocco

 

DEALING WITH PRESSURE

Claude LeRoy managed Cameroon at the 1998 World Cup - his second spell in charge

LeRoy briefly returned to take charge of Cameroon for the 1998 World Cup, and then had spells at Strasbourg, Shanghai and even Cambridge United.

But it was in Africa that his heart lay, and he returned in 2004 to take charge of DR Congo.

"In a country like DR Congo, 78 million people are completely crazy about football," LeRoy says.

"In other countries - even in Brazil - you get a lot of people who say, 'Oh no, I don't care about football.' That never happens in Africa."

LeRoy's commitment to immerse himself in his chosen country may have won him the respect of the locals, but it has also exposed him to the unique pressures of satisfying a football-mad populace.

"When people in Europe talk about pressure, I'm always laughing, because the pressure in Europe is nothing," says LeRoy. 

"Give them two or three weeks in Africa, then they will see what is pressure.

 

GETTING HIS WAY

LeRoy took DR Congo to the 2006 Cup of Nations quarter-finals.

But LeRoy has made a habit of delivering under pressure.

Against the odds, he took DR Congo the African Cup of Nations quarter-finals in 2006, before throwing his lot in with Ghana.

A third-place finish at the 2008 tournament duly followed.

The Frenchman says that the perks of his nomadic existence comfortably outweigh the stresses of the job.

"To be a traveller with shoes of wind like me, I'm sure I am a little bit lucky," he says poetically.

LeRoy believes that his earning his living abroad has insulated him from some of the disenchanting changes in European football.

"I love more and more the game of football but I hate more and more the world of football," he says.

In a thinly veiled reference to meddling owners, he adds:

"Since the first day in Africa, everybody understood that if I cannot work how I want, I was ready to take the first plane back. Nobody can force me to do anything."

In 2008, LeRoy took Ghana to third place in their home Africa Cup of Nations

 

JOURNEY'S END

Le Roy returned to DR Congo in 2011, but his second spell was less successful.

He failed to get the team out of a tough group at the 2013 Africa Cup - the one black mark on his excellent Cup of Nations record.

Many would have predicted the same fate for a Congo side that had not won an Afcon game for 40 years prior to this year's tournament, but against the odds LeRoy is in the last eight for the seventh time in his extraordinary, nomadic career.

Will this post be his last?

"In 2019 the Africa Cup of Nations is in Cameroon and maybe it will be the perfect time to finish the circle.

The beginning of everything in Africa was in Cameroon," says Le Roy, who celebrates 50 years in football this June.

His former players will not let him go quietly.

"Some of my players - Michael Essien, George Weah - want to organise a huge jubilee," he says. "I don't know where, but we will see!"

A party thrown by some of the continent's most illustrious stars.

There could be no more fitting send-off for a man who has dedicated his life to African football.

 

LeRoy's African Cup of Nations campaigns

Cameroon
1986 - Runners-up

Cameroon
1988 - Champions

Senegal
1990 - Fourth place

Senegal
1992 - Quarter-finals

DR Congo
2006 - Quarter-finals

Ghana
2008 - Third place

DR Congo
2013 - First round

Congo
2015 - TBC

 

 

 

27 Jan 2015
(BBC Sport UK by James Gheerbrant & Steve Crossman)

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