The Citizen (Gauteng)

MASTER OF DRAMATIC EXITS

FRENCH NATIONAL TEAM COULD BE NEXT NEXT STEP FOR BELOVED ZIZOU

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Just days ago Zinedine Zidane was basking in the glory of becoming the first coach in history to win three consecutiv­e Champions League titles with Real Madrid and staking a claim as one of the great coaches in history.

Yesterday, he said he was quitting the Spanish giants in an announceme­nt that seemed to have even taken the club’s president Florentino Perez by surprise.

It appears the 45-year-old Frenchman has decided that it won’t ever get better than this for him at the famously demanding 13-time European champions.

“I don’t see myself continuing to win this year and I am a winner, I don’t like to lose,” said Zidane, who was under contract with Real until 2020.

The Frenchman specialise­s in dramatic departures – in the 2006 World Cup final in Berlin, his final appearance as a player, was cut short when he was sent off for headbuttin­g Italian defender Marco Materazzi. Zidane defended himself by saying the Italian had insulted his family.

The 3-1 victory over Liverpool in Kiev on Saturday was the pinnacle of a coaching career after his reign as a player with Real Madrid which peaked when he scored the winning goal in the 2002 Champions League final against Bayer Leverkusen in Glasgow.

Zidane was considered one of the all-time greats as a player, his mixture of sublime skill wrapped up in a muscular package driving France to victory in the 1998 World Cup on home soil.

Affectiona­tely known as “Zizou” in France, he was World Player-ofthe-Year three times, in 1998, 2000 and 2003 in a career that started at Cannes, moved onto Bordeaux before he moved into the big league with Juventus, staying five years, before joining Real in 2001.

Incredibly, his record-breaking achievemen­t in Kiev came less than three full seasons in charge after he was promoted from his position as coach of Real’s youth team.

It was only in January 2016 that he took charge of the full Real team.

“You can’t help but admire what he has done,” current French manager Didier Deschamps, who won the World Cup as a player alongside Zidane in 1998, told France’s TF1 after the Kiev triumph.

“Already as a player he was an extraordin­ary. He’s had a second life as a coach and he is already an extraordin­ary coach. Achieving three Champions League wins is fabulous.”

Madrid sports daily AS said after the final that Zidane was “the architect of this glorious and possibly unrepeatab­le era”.

It is widely expected that Zidane will one day manage France himself. He has never made a secret of his ambition to do so and speculatio­n will now grow that he will succeed Deschamps after this year’s World Cup finals.

Guy Lacombe, Zidane’s first coach when he joined Cannes in 1988, said that there was little left to challenge the coach who had already won virtually everything.

“But there is one thing,” Lacombe told “He would like one day to coach the French national team.

“It will happen at the right time. In the right conditions. There is no rush.”

Zidane has won nine trophies since replacing Rafael Benitez in the Santiago Bernabeu dugout in January 2016.

It is a remarkable record, all the more so for a man who admitted to not being the best tactician.

“I am not the best coach tactically, but I have other things,” he said ahead of the Kiev final. “I know very well how the dressing room and a player’s head works, and that for me is very important.” –

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 ?? Pictures: AFP ?? HAT-TRICK. Frenchman Zinedine Zidane holding the Uefa Champions League trophy after winning the final as Real Madrid coach in 2016 (left), 2017 and 2018.
Pictures: AFP HAT-TRICK. Frenchman Zinedine Zidane holding the Uefa Champions League trophy after winning the final as Real Madrid coach in 2016 (left), 2017 and 2018.
 ?? Picture: AFP ?? OUT OF THE BLUE. Zinedine Zidane at a press conference in Madrid yesterday announcing his shock resignatio­n as Real Madrid coach.
Picture: AFP OUT OF THE BLUE. Zinedine Zidane at a press conference in Madrid yesterday announcing his shock resignatio­n as Real Madrid coach.

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