Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

Today: Leicester Tomorrow: The World

TOURE HAS HIS SIGHTS SET ON MAKING HISTORY WITH AN AFRICAN NATION

- BY MATTHEW DUNN

IF a return to football seems ages away, spare a thought for the frayed patience of Pele.

In 1977, the Brazil superstar predicted an African team would win the World Cup. He reckoned it would be before 2000; instead the wait will now be at least 45 years until Qatar 2022.

However, Kolo Toure thinks he knows why it has not happened yet – they have not had the right manager.

Now he is working hard to be the trailblaze­r who finally makes Pele (below) right.

The former Manchester City, Arsenal and Liverpool defender is learning his trade as assistant to Brendan Rodgers at Leicester.

Toure played under him, Arsene Wenger and Pep Guardiola, and is studying for his UEFA Pro Licence at St George’s Park.

“If you want to bring the best to the players you have to learn the best philosophy of football playing,” he said.

“You have to learn the best way to coach players. I want to do it because Africa needs that, Africa needs people who can inspire them. There always has to be one person to start – and then the rest will follow.”

As a player, Toure was one of the early African imports to the Premier League when he signed for Arsenal in 2002.

“I felt I had to do everything properly,” he said. “When you are the first player to come from your country people judge every other Ivory Coast player by how you do. If you do things right they will always think, ‘Kolo Toure comes from the Ivory Coast and he’s doing well’, and they will find new talent there. After me, so many players from the Ivory Coast came here to express their talent. I was very proud of that.”

Up until now, though, African teams at the World Cup finals have been managed generally by foreigners. Aside from the countries on the Mediterran­ean coast, who do tend to appoint coaches internally, only five of the 27 other African teams to compete in the finals had a coach from the continent.

“For all the knowledge of the coach coming in, you have to know the African player,” Toure said. “People are more relaxed, and timing is not so very, very important. You have to go there and make sure every detail is dealt with.

“You must nail things. It may be you need to put an extra discipline on them. Of course, you want them to express themselves, but you have to make sure that you tell them things in the right moment and at the right time.”

If anybody has the charisma to carry it off, it is Toure, who has won over fans wherever he has played. And then there is that ‘Kolo, Kolo’ song...

“It touches my heart,” he said. “When you come to another country and the people embrace you, give you praise and even sing your name? It is unbelievab­le.

“Fifteen years ago, if somebody had told me, ‘Kolo – people will be singing your name everywhere in the UK’, I would say, ‘Are you joking, or what?’ “This is a dream for me.”

And managing the Ivory Coast to a World Cup final is just his next one.

1990 Cameroon (W3 D0 L2) QF 2002 Senegal (W2 D2 L1) QF 2010 Ghana (W2 D1 L2) QF 1994 Nigeria (W2 D0 L2) Last 16 1982 Algeria (W2 D0 L1) Group stage

 ??  ?? KOLO TOURE believes his brother Yaya would have won the Ballon d’or if only he had a workrate to match his.
The pair (right) played for Manchester City together between
2010 and 2013 but
Kolo makes no secret of the fact that his younger brother lacked his drive.
“I am more competitiv­e, he was more talented,” he said.
“Technicall­y, he is fantastic, but when it comes to running I work harder. If Yaya had my workrate with his talent, he would have won the Ballon
Kolo Toure has his eye on achieving great things in the hot seat at World Cup d’or. That is what I expected for him. Overall, he was a better player – I think he did better than me.”
The younger brother’s surliness meant Kolo was very much in front in the popularity stakes, despite his protestati­ons.
“Yaya’s a lovely man,” he said. “He’s a lovely, lovely, guy. Sometimes there is a misunderst­anding of his communicat­ion because English is not our first language. But deep inside he’s a lovely guy.”
KOLO TOURE believes his brother Yaya would have won the Ballon d’or if only he had a workrate to match his. The pair (right) played for Manchester City together between 2010 and 2013 but Kolo makes no secret of the fact that his younger brother lacked his drive. “I am more competitiv­e, he was more talented,” he said. “Technicall­y, he is fantastic, but when it comes to running I work harder. If Yaya had my workrate with his talent, he would have won the Ballon Kolo Toure has his eye on achieving great things in the hot seat at World Cup d’or. That is what I expected for him. Overall, he was a better player – I think he did better than me.” The younger brother’s surliness meant Kolo was very much in front in the popularity stakes, despite his protestati­ons. “Yaya’s a lovely man,” he said. “He’s a lovely, lovely, guy. Sometimes there is a misunderst­anding of his communicat­ion because English is not our first language. But deep inside he’s a lovely guy.”

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