Orlando Sentinel

Belgium getting it together

Martinez takes team to the top with teamwork

- By Kevin Baxter

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Nothing conveys Roberto Martinez’s obsession with his job better than the way he outfitted his Liverpool, England, home while he was coaching at Everton.

Flat-screen TVs hung from the walls on opposite sides of the living room and in the middle stood a sofa, its seats pointing in different directions. Martinez would sit on one side, facing a TV showing soccer games in an seemingly endless loop, and his Scottish-born wife, Beth, would face the other way, watching anything but soccer.

“But we are sitting together. That is the main thing,” Martinez recounted. “It has saved my marriage.”

More recently Martinez’s focus on soccer and togetherne­ss may have saved the Belgian national team, one he inherited two years ago after a series of underwhelm­ing performanc­es. On Tuesday that team will meet France in a World Cup semifinal, a win away from going where no Belgian team has ever gone.

“This team has been playing together for seven, eight years,” midfielder Kevin de Bruyne said, explaining the transforma­tion. “I think that he brought us together. He made us more confident in ourselves. There’s more a feeling of being together.”

And that has both the team and its coach closing in on World Cup milestones. For Belgium, which washed out in the quarterfin­als of its last two major championsh­ips, a win Tuesday would take it to a World Cup final for the first time. For Martinez, a Spaniard, capturing the title with Belgium would make him the first foreign coach to win soccer’s biggest prize.

The previous 20 World Cup-winning coaches were born in the country they took to the crown.

Martinez, 44, wound up on the doorstep of history more by chance than design. He was the secondlong­est-tenured coach in the English Premier League when Everton fired him with one game left in the 2015-16 season, leaving Martinez crushed, if not totally surprised.

Two months later the firing proved providenti­al, though, after Belgium crashed out of the European Championsh­ips, the second time in three years the team had come up short in a major tournament.

With Belgium’s aging “Golden Generation” in danger of fading into oblivion without a trophy, the country’s soccer federation dismissed coach Marc Wilmots — a legend who had made four World Cup teams as a player and led the team to another as manager — and replaced him with Martinez, who had never played or coached at the internatio­nal level.

In England, Martinez was known as a deep thinker, an affable and engaging person who was unfailingl­y humble. Those traits made him the perfect manager to lead a talented but disparate group of players that had underachie­ved under previous coaches.

“This is a team. This is not a group of individual­s,” Martinez said Monday, explaining the message he’s been trying to drill into his players. “And that’s been a process.”

Belgium lost its first game under Martinez, a friendly with Spain. But it hasn’t lost since, taking a national-record 24-game unbeaten streak into Tuesday’s match.

“I have a lot of respect for him. He took on this national squad,” French coach Didier Deschamps said Monday. “He, of course, benefits from Wilmots’ work. (But) he put his own mark on the team.”

Under Martinez, Belgium adopted a more Spanish style, favoring possession, playing with three defenders at the back, pushing his wingers forward and leaning heavily on a deep midfield led by De Bruyne. And that formula has worked — Belgium leads the World Cup with 14 goals, getting them from nine players.

“Deeply optimistic. Almost too positive,” said Roger Bennett, one half of the soccer punditry duo “Men in Blazers” and someone who knows Martinez well. “A manager who committed to football played on the front foot. “Defense? Not so much.” Martinez’s best work has arguably come off the field, though, where his mantra has been “simplicity and basics.” To avoid the potential for off-field distractio­ns, he left physical midfielder Radja Nainggolan off the roster for Russia.

A fan favorite under Wilmots, Nainggolan has been a discipline problem under Martinez.

To help his players deal with the pressure of expectatio­ns, he hired Thierry Henry, an unflappabl­e world and European champion with France, as an assistant coach.

“As Belgium, we cannot follow a generation that has won a World Cup,” Martinez said. “Thierry Henry brings that (kind of experience).”

Now he not only has his players believing they can succeed, he has the country believing it too. When the coach stood up to leave his post-game press conference following a quarterfin­al win over Brazil, the Belgian journalist­s in the room broke into applause. They may be cheering again Tuesday.

“The Belgium team is the most complete team in the tournament,” French goalkeeper Hugo Lloris said. “The team can defend, it can attack, it can attack in the air. They have everything.

“It’s a great team. They have the right players in the right places.”

The right coach too.

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/AP ?? Spaniard Roberto Martinez, middle, could make Belgium the first World Cup winner with a coach born out of the country. France vs. Belgium 2 p.m. Tuesday Croatia vs. England 2 p.m. Wednesday
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO/AP Spaniard Roberto Martinez, middle, could make Belgium the first World Cup winner with a coach born out of the country. France vs. Belgium 2 p.m. Tuesday Croatia vs. England 2 p.m. Wednesday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States