The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Martinez could be first coach to win Cup for another nation

WORLD CUP SEMIFINALS: FRANCE VS. BELGIUM, 2 P.M. (FOX)

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MOSCOW — Two wins from becoming the first foreign coach to win a World Cup, Roberto Martinez always will be known as Frankie to his former boss.

“He reminded me of those wonderful what I call zoot-suited American vocalists, like Bobby Darin, Frankie Avalon, Frankie Valli,” Everton chairman Bill Kenwright said. “And I christened him Frankie from the first day I met him.”

Martinez had more hair then. Now balding, the Spaniard has led Belgium to a World Cup semifinal against France on Tuesday night, three days before his 45th birthday. All 20 previous World Cup-winning coaches were born in the nation they led to the title.

“He’s a genius tactically,” said American goalkeeper Tim Howard, who spent three seasons with Martinez at Everton. “He always finds a weakness in the opponent. He prepares his teams to break down the opponent. No game is the same — he changes tactics every game.”

Belgium beat five-time champion Brazil 2-1 in the quarterfin­als when Martinez switched to a new formation — a 4-3-3 with star forward Romelu Lukaku on the right wing. If Belgium gets past the French, The Red Devils would play England or Croatia on Sunday with the chance to win their first World Cup title.

Englishman George Raynor’s Sweden team advanced to the 1958 final at home but lost to Brazil, and Ernst Happel of Austria led the Netherland­s team to the 1978 final, an extra-time defeat to host Argentina. Martinez hopes to succeed where they failed by employing a two-year process to ensure “this is a team, this is not a group of individual­s.”

“There’s more feeling of trust in each other,” midfielder Kevin De Bryune said.

Martinez is familiar in the U.S. from his work for ESPN as an analyst at the 2010 and 2014 World Cups, the last two European Championsh­ips and the 2013 Confederat­ions Cup. He insisted the network install a screen that showed the overhead tactical camera.

“Roberto only wanted to watch that,” said Amy Rosenfeld, ESPN’s senior coordinati­ng producer for soccer. “We always had a setup where everybody else could see the main feed, and Roberto had a separate monitor where he could just watch the entire game from his high end zone. That’s how he could consume the match, interpret the match, look at shape, look at formation, look at vulnerabil­ities, passing lanes.”

Martinez impressed colleagues with his focus, especially after the Seine flooded ESPN’s set in Paris two years ago.

“Rats that I think were living in the Jurassic era emerged, and we could not get rid of them. These things could have been in the fourth race at Belmont — these were enormous rats,” Rosenfeld said. “The rats are running past Roberto — he doesn’t miss a beat. He’s doing his analysis, one take usually, it may have even been live. There was a rat chewing on Roberto’s laces.”

In Britain, he remains somewhat of a mystery, at least his name. While he pronounces it Mar-TEEnez, English media often stress the first syllable and say MAR-tin-ez.

He grew up in the Catalonia city of Balaguer and left the youth system of his hometown club at 16 to join Zaragoza. He played for a series of small clubs and became known for his move to third-tier Wigan for the 1995-96 season along with Jesus Seba and Isidro Diaz, a trio quickly dubbed the “Three Amigos.”

He quit as a player at 33 when Swansea offered the manager’s job in February 2007, and in his first full season earned the club a promotion that put it back in the second tier for the first time since 1983-84. Martinez moved up to the Premier League with Wigan in June 2009 and after a bizarre 2012-13 season, when Wigan was relegated while winning its first FA Cup, he switched to more prestigiou­s and ambitious Everton.

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