The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

New expectatio­ns

Manager Frank de Boer brings a penchant for developing young talent to Atlanta United as it begins its MLS championsh­ip defense.

- By Steve Hummer steven.hummer@ajc.com

The pass, delivered with the sweep of a left foot, is as fine and accurate a thing as any throw authored by the greats, from Brady to Clemente. A surpassing pass by any measure.

It was the 90th minute of a tied World Cup quarterfin­al game in Marseilles when Franciscus de Boer booted this high arcing kick, 50 yards, diagonally across a field, over all Argentine resistance, landing it precisely on the right foot of Dennis Bergkamp. That Bergkamp controlled the ball and artfully converted it into a winning goal for the Neth- erlands meant his name would be branded into one of the great World Cup moments. Ah, but the pass abides, too.

That was 1998, and nearly 21 years later de Boer — call him Frank — is well past the point of living on one exploit. When asked if he has tried to recreate that famous pass on a certain Marietta practice field with his latest team, it is the coach who answers, not the one-time star reliving old glories.

He can barely get into the subject before he’s turning it into a coaching moment, invoking the name of a 21-year-old Atlanta United defender he’s got his eye on now.

“That was my specialty,” he said. “Miles Robinson, for example, I don’t want him to (try those type of passes) because that’s

not his quality. He’s a better defender than me, that’s for sure. He’s a better athlete thanme. He has to know when he has the ball, he has to give it as fast as possible to the players who can distribute it the best.” The path that has led de Boer to concern himselfwit­h the qualities of a youngAmeri­canplaying­onayoungAm­erican teamis awholly twisting and unforeseen one. Much like the coach before him at AtlantaUni­ted— themanwho producedac­hampionshi­plike it was instant grits, Gerardo Martino — de Boer couldn’t have imagined a soccer life leading to a spaceship of a stadium offff Northside Drive in Atlanta. Yet, here he is, imported to continue thework that the wildlypopu­larMartino­began. Not easy work, either. New coaches normally step into a mess, and have years of leeway while slinging the wetvac. This one is replacing the MLSCupwinn­er amidexpect­ations that anything less this season is a tattered retreat. Growing up in the town of Hoorn, about 30 miles north ofAmsterda­m, deBoer wears the agrarian nature of the place in his name — it translates to “the Farmer.” Althoughhi­s fatherwasa­plasterer by trade. Hewasnever­shortofsom­eone toplaywith, being one of amatchedse­tofathleti­ctwins. And both Frank and Ronald explored an assortment of sports, some even involving the use of their hands (tennis). And, yes, when winter came and the water froze, de Boer went all Hans Brinker and ice-skated for kilometer after kilometer. ButwhenAms­terdam’sAjax soccer club — possessing one of theworld’s premier youth training programs — came sniffiffin­g around both brothers in their adolescenc­e, the direction was clear. The ties between Frank and Ronald were unbreakabl­e. As they played together around the world — sharing time on teams in the Netherland­s, Spain, Scotland and Qatar — one always seemed to be better in combinatio­n withthe other. Frank the deft defender, passing to Ronald on the attack. “When he took one step forward, I knewexactl­ywhat he wanted. When he took one step forward I already knew he wanted the ball at his feet,” Frank said. “(Frank) was a great player. You could see it with Frank and Ronald that sixth sense they had, that ability and awareness on the pitch that they obviously got fromplayin­gwitheacho­therfromwh­en they were two years old,” AtlantaUni­ted President Darren Eales said. “Look at the delivery of that (World Cup pass), that awareness, that quickness of mind. That springs to mind when you think of Frank,” Eales added. (When asked which twin he’dtake in theirprime, Eales the personnel guy yielded to Eales the diplomat: “I don’t want to get hit by Frank, so I’d take Frank.”) Coaching and raising two young children back in the Netherland­s, Ronaldwas not part of the package when Unitedhire­dFrank inDecember. “Maybe in the future, younever know,” Frank said. As an elite player, Frank de Boer made 112 internatio­nal appearance­s for the Netherland­s and spent the bulk of his career playing for Ajax (1988-99) and Barcelona (1999-2003). He was known as an instinctua­l defender who could show sparks of goal-scoring ability. Leanand fifit, he still looks the part at the age of 48. “You watch him doing free kicks at the end of training, and Frank is scoring more goals than the rest of the team,” Eales said. Then, too, there was the steroid thing. In 2001, de Boer tested positive for nandralone. Initially suspendedf­or a year, he appealed, applyingth­edefense he had unknowingl­y taken the performanc­e enhancer as part of a “contaminat­ed supplement.” His suspension­was reduced to 11 weeks. To this day, he maintains his innocence. “I don’t think it’s a black mark because I didn’t use it. I can look everyone honestlyin­the eyes andsay that,” he said. De Boer figures a simple visual inspection­should have convinced anyone hewasn’t using steroids back then. “I’mlooking stronger now than when I was a profession­al football player,” de Boer said. He said he never smoked, scarcely drinks — “My only guilty pleasure is a glass of wine” — and discovered the benefits of better nutrition and CrossFit training in his mid-40s. Coaching hadneverbe­ena part of the big plan, de Boer said, until the end of his playing days came intoclear view. Then he began taking roll of all the coaches he had played for, some good, some bad. Maybe, he began to think, he could put that experience to use, accentuati­ng the positive traits. As a player he dove into the various cultures of those places the global game took him. So, overfififi­fififive years inBarcelon­a, he thought it important to learn Spanish. Little could he have known then that becoming comfortabl­e with that languagewo­uld be an important asset in landing a job on a team with a heavy Latin American influence. “His Spanish is better than my English,” reports Atlanta United scoring star JosefMarti­nez, throughani­nterpreter. His diverse readings have nodoubtbee­nhelpful, too. At onepointdu­ringaninte­rview last week, de Boer reached acrossspor­tsandquote­dfrom Michael Jordan’s coachinChi­cago, Phil Jackson. This coaching thing looked pretty easy when de Boer went back home to rev up that part of a career. After serving his internship with the Ajax youth program, he was bumped up to the bigs in 2010, where he promptly won four straight Dutch Eredivisie titles. The harsh chill of reality blewoverhi­moncehelef­t the shelter of his familiar home team. De Boer’s two postings in advance of getting the AtlantaUni­ted jobwere both failures that burned hot and brief. First, hewas fifired after just three months with Inter Milan. Then he lasted but four Premier League games with Crystal Palace — losing all four, shut out in each. Ofcourse, EalesandAt­lanta United leadership had concerns over this recent history, but theywere dispelledb­y de Boers’ larger body of work in developing young talent and fostering a style of play that would suit United’s dynamic andwinning ways. They, like de Boer, came to see the failures in Italy and England as thekindofb­admarriage­susually made in the early morning hours in Las Vegas. In return, de Boer, like the big-namefififi­fififilmst­arwhoiscom­ing off back- to- back flops, needs a place where he can produce a hit again. Hethinks he has found that. “That’swhy I chose Atlanta — it’s an organizati­on with a good structure, a good environmen­t to train. You don’t have to look around for people with other agendas than me or who want to stab you in the back,” he said. There was a fitful beginning for United and its new coach in late February when traveling to Costa Rica for a CONCACAF Champions League opener. The 3-1 loss was unworthy of the topMLS team. The attentiona­ndpressure­s only ratchet up tonight when United begins defense of its title at D.C. United. It’s a delicate job de Boer assumes. There are no obvious holes in this dike for the Dutchman to plug. He must blend his ideas with the conceptsMa­rtino installed, ones that made United the most successful­andwatchab­leteam in its league. Asmidfifie­lder JulianGres­sel said, “It’s Atlanta United, it’s not FC Frank de Boer. We’ll still stay true to our identity and our style and I think he has alreadydon­e some adapting to that. But alsowe adapt our style toward (his) way.” “Do I come in saying we have to do it the way I did at Ajax? No,” de Boer said. “I have to respect the things they did, because they have the results.” This coaching job will require supreme touch, not unlike the deft, cross-field pass. One de Boer will be asked to perform on a neardaily basis now.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Atlanta United manager Frank de Boer coaches during Thursday night’s 4-0 victory over C.S. Herediano in their CONCACAF Champions League match in Kennesaw. United begins defense of its MLS title tonight at D.C. United.
CURTIS COMPTON / CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Atlanta United manager Frank de Boer coaches during Thursday night’s 4-0 victory over C.S. Herediano in their CONCACAF Champions League match in Kennesaw. United begins defense of its MLS title tonight at D.C. United.
 ?? FIRO FOTO / ALLSPORT ?? Frank de Boer of Barcelona (right) and Vicente ofMallorca in action during a Spanish Primera Leaguematc­h. De Boer made 112 internatio­nal appearance­s for the Netherland­s and played for Barcelona from1999-2003.
FIRO FOTO / ALLSPORT Frank de Boer of Barcelona (right) and Vicente ofMallorca in action during a Spanish Primera Leaguematc­h. De Boer made 112 internatio­nal appearance­s for the Netherland­s and played for Barcelona from1999-2003.

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