Shanghai Daily

Tabarez revives Uruguay fortunes

- SOCCER (Reuters)

OSCAR Tabarez began his second stint as Uruguay coach in May 2006, one month before the World Cup. But it was not going to Germany — in fact, it struggled even to find anyone who would play it in friendlies.

“We were hardly competing internatio­nally,” he said in one interview. “We had to travel to the most distant parts of the world just to have matches.”

Meanwhile, the team’s training base outside Montevideo was nicknamed “the Low Performanc­e Center” by players who complained of cold rooms and lumpy mattresses.

Uruguay, which had lost to Australia in the playoff for a place in Germany, was in the wilderness. Nobody would say that of the team nowadays.

Tabarez is still in charge 12 years on, having led the team to one World Cup semifinal, one round of 16 and the Copa America title in 2011. Today, Uruguay faces France in the quarterfin­als of the 2018 World Cup.

Not even ill-health has stopped the 71-year-old who was expected to resign in 2016 after he was diagnosed with a rare neurologic­al disease known as Guillain-Barre syndrome but has carried on regardless with the help of a walking stick or electric wheelchair.

Tabarez is more than just the national coach and has effectivel­y taken charge of youth developmen­t in Uruguay in what has become known as the “Tabarez process”. In an interview 10 years ago, Tabarez, who also coached Uruguay at the 1990 World Cup in Italy, outlined his plans for football in the country.

He spoke of the importance of keeping the under-20 and Olympic teams active and bringing players over from Europe to receive additional coaching and keep them in touch.

The subject matter extended to pressure exerted by parents on their children to make it as profession­als which turned matches even at under-10 level into battlefiel­ds. “There are more or less 200,000 boys playing football in Uruguay, of this only 0.14 percent may have a possibilit­y of going to Europe,” he said. “The parents are making the wrong gamble and we have to make them aware of these facts.”

Even amid the heat of the World Cup battle in Russia, Tabarez found time to talk about widely-seen television images which showed children in a Uruguayan school bursting out of their classroom to celebrate the late winning goal against Egypt in the group stage.

“Those kids will never forget that moment,” he said. “I’m very proud about the way in which we live and experience football in our country. I talk to the players about this and use it as part of their motivation.”

Known as the schoolteac­her — a profession he briefly exercised during the 1980s — Tabarez has managed to retain Uruguayan players’ renowned fighting spirit while curbing their wildest excesses.

Uruguay has the best disciplina­ry record of the quarterfin­alists with only one yellow card so far. “When we won the Copa America in 2011, we also took the fair play title and that was very significan­t,” said Tabarez.

His approach is summed up by a message on the wall of his house, and attributed to Che Guevara: “You must toughen yourself without losing tenderness.”

 ??  ?? Uruguay defender Diego Godin attends a training session at the Sports Centre Borsky in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, yesterday on the eve of their World Cup quarterfin­al against France. — AFP
Uruguay defender Diego Godin attends a training session at the Sports Centre Borsky in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, yesterday on the eve of their World Cup quarterfin­al against France. — AFP

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