FourFourTwo

The making of Roberto Firmino How the Liverpool star made it to the top, by those who helped

Roberto Firmino battled the odds to become a European champion at Liverpool, after making a miraculous journey from Maceio to Merseyside via a five- year spell in Germany. FFT retells the remarkable tale with those who were part of it

- Words Ed Mccambridg­e Additional reporting Marcus Alves

There are good trials, there are great trials, and then there are the kind of trials that Roberto Firmino enjoyed at Figueirens­e in 2007. The 16- year- old had come 2,000 miles from the crime- infested city of Maceio on Brazil’s eastern tip – and with him was a dentist. Dental surgeon Marcellus Portella had been working as part of the medical team at CRB, a club in Brazil’s second division, when he stopped to watch Firmino playing for one of their youth teams. He liked what he had seen, and immediatel­y offered to represent the starlet. With his assistance, Portella said, Firmino could earn enough cash to move his family out of their impoverish­ed neighbourh­ood someday ( as of 2018, Maceio’s murder rate ranked it 21st among the world’s most dangerous cities).

Portella began trying to get Firmino noticed, and he connected CRB youth coach Toninho Almeida with Luciano ‘ Bilu’ Lopes – a Maceio native and experience­d pro at Atletico Mineiro. Bilu helped to plan a trial at Sao Paulo, which didn’t go well, and another at Figueirens­e. As sporting director Erasmo Damiani remembers, Firmino did the rest.

“Roberto scored two overhead kicks within half an hour of his first training session in the morning,” he tells Fourfourtw­o with a smile.

“The under- 17 coach, Hemerson Maria, soon rushed to my room, urging us to keep hold of him. The same thing happened later in the afternoon with the under- 20 coach, Rogerio Micale. ‘ If Hemerson doesn’t take him, I want this kid with my team,’ he insisted. That’s how talented Roberto was.”

“HE HAS THE SKILL OF A BRAZILIAN AND THE MENTALITY OF A GERMAN: THAT’S WHAT MAKES HIM SPECIAL”

AROUND THE WORLD IN EIGHTY CLUBS

Firmino was signed on the spot, as Figueirens­e were finalising preparatio­ns ahead of Brazil’s 2008 domestic campaign. Between January and May, the club would be competing in the Campeonato Catarinens­e, a regional division in the state of Santa Catarina, with the Serie A season to follow.

It was about this time that Lutz Pfannensti­el, a German goalkeeper coming to the end of a nomadic playing career, pitched up in Brazil. Football had taken him around the globe, from New Zealand to Norway and South Africa to Singapore, and he was ready to move on again following six months in Canada.

“I was in Vancouver when my agent called and asked if I was interested in going to South America,” Pfannensti­el tells FFT. “At the time, I had played profession­al football in five FIFA confederat­ions, and he told me it would be an amazing record to make it six. It had been my dream to play in Brazil, so several weeks later I signed for Atletico Ibirama in Santa Catarina. Firmino was in the youth team of Figueirens­e, who were in our league.”

Pfannensti­el never directly faced the young Firmino, although some convenient scheduling ensured he was able to watch him in action. The playing conditions, however, meant the youngster’s talent wasn’t always easy to spot.

“The youth teams would often play on the same weekend as the first team,” recalls the former keeper, “so I was lucky enough to see a young Roberto play a few times. That league was nothing like you would imagine Brazilian football to be, though. It was deep down in the south, not far from Argentina; a very hard and physical environmen­t. Forget samba- inspired Brazilian football – this was all long balls and opponents kicking the s** t out of each other.”

Over time, these bruising encounters gave Firmino some added toughness. Off the pitch, though, he was a desperatel­y quiet character.

“If you went up to him and said he wouldn’t get his salary that month, he would just look at you and smile,” chuckles Damiani. “It was unbelievab­le. He was so shy that people asked me if he was mute.”

But despite his reserved nature, the prodigy’s displays had got him noticed.

“Arsenal had him on their radar and were considerin­g making an offer,” reveals Damiani. “They chose to wait and see. PSV wanted him as well: they promised to get in touch with an official invitation, but took too long.”

By the summer of 2009, it was Marseille who were seriously interested – and their invitation of a trial also included a return plane ticket to Paris. A potentiall­y life- changing opportunit­y beckoned for 17- year old Firmino. However, his dreams were quickly reduced to the stuff of nightmares.

His outbound flight included a short layover at Madrid’s Barajas Airport, a gateway between Europe and South America that is notorious for its strict immigratio­n procedures. Having touched down in the Spanish capital, Firmino had all of his documents thoroughly checked, before he was interrogat­ed by airport officials. He was taken to a room filled with even more bewildered travellers, who were collective­ly informed that their journeys would be going no further. Firmino was sent back to Brazil on the next available flight.

“That trip to Marseille was a very traumatic one for him,” explains Damiani. “In Madrid he was asked for all sorts of documents he didn’t have. He was desperate, alone and didn’t know a single word of Spanish. He called his parents from the airport in tears.

“I spoke to the police officer in Madrid and sent him a fax that specified exactly how long he would be training with Marseille, but there was this whole diplomatic row between Brazil and Spain going on back then, so they simply deported him.”

To make matters worse, anyone who went through that hellish process had their passport stamped, forbidding them to enter Spain for the next 10 years.

Fortunatel­y, Marseille remained determined to get a look at Firmino.

“A month later, they sent him a brand new invitation, but this time they booked a flight going straight to Paris,” says Damiani. Once again, Firmino packed his things and prepared

for a life- changing opportunit­y. Once again, he would be left disappoint­ed.

“He did end up going on trial with Marseille, but ultimately they declined to pay his release clause,” laments Damiani.

For the second time, Firmino returned home to Brazil in tears.

JOURNEY TO THE MIDDLE OF NOWHERE

A call- up to Figueirens­e’s senior team arrived after the conclusion of their 2009 campaign, weeks after Firmino’s 18th birthday. Brazil’s second tier – Figueirens­e had been relegated – was a more rarefied atmosphere in which to display his talents. In 2010, during his first full season of men’s football, Firmino scored eight league goals as the club secured promotion back to Serie A.

“Once Firmino had been promoted to their first team, he didn’t take long to make a name for himself,” says Damiani. “He was named the breakout star of Serie B.”

It was during this campaign that Firmino first came to the attention of Ernst Tanner, then sporting director at Bundesliga club Hoffenheim. But he needed some convincing.

“I first heard Roberto’s name when a scouting agency in Brazil offered him to us,” remembers Tanner, now sporting director at MLS side Philadelph­ia Union. “They provided us with videos and spoke highly of him.

“But the consensus on Brazilian players was not good at Hoffenheim then. We’d had some success with the likes of Carlos Eduardo and Luiz Gustavo, but the past few Brazilians we’d been offered were flops.”

By this point, Pfannensti­el the globe- trotting glovesman was poised to take up a scouting role under Tanner at Hoffenheim. Before he officially started, the club called to ask if he’d ever come across Firmino in Brazil.

“I said that I’d seen him and he was a huge talent, but that he’d need to improve physically if he wanted to thrive in Germany,” continues Pfannensti­el. “That’s when Ernst decided to go and see him for himself.”

And so, in the autumn of 2010, Tanner flew to Brazil to track down Firmino. But it was the worst possible time to visit there, the league calendar having been thrown into chaos by the recent World Cup in South Africa. Fixtures that should have been played in June and July had been postponed, with clubs then forced to play catch- up later in the year, frequently in distant locations.

“I followed Figueirens­e to an away match in Goiania, around 750 miles to the north of Florianopo­lis [ in Santa Catarina],” says Tanner. “It was a long, hard journey to the middle of nowhere. They lost 3- 1 and Firmino came on for the final 27 minutes. I’m not even sure he touched the ball.”

Figueirens­e had to hotfoot it back home for another game only three days later. With no guarantee that Firmino would feature much in that match, either, Tanner decided to watch one of the team’s training sessions.

But even that was easier said than done.

“I turned up and they wouldn’t let me in the stadium,” Tanner says with a sigh.

“I hadn’t travelled all that way for nothing, though, so I bribed one of the guards. I said that I was a tourist; a groundhopp­er who just wanted a look inside the stadium. Eventually, he let me in.”

Tanner’s frustratio­ns disappeare­d when he finally got a glimpse of Firmino in action.

“He was so quick, he had balance, he could head the ball and he worked well defensivel­y,” Tanner tells us. “In that one training session, I saw exactly what I wanted. I was convinced we had to sign him.”

But if Tanner was impressed by the forward’s ability, Figueirens­e’s manager Marcio Goiano appeared not to be.

“Firmino was the most criticised player in the whole squad,” says Tanner, smiling. “The other players simply stood around laughing as the coach laid into him all afternoon. It looked as if he couldn’t do a thing right.”

Years later, when both men were working for Red Bull – Tanner with Salzburg and Goiano at Bragantino [ see page 56] – Tanner asked his colleague why he had been quite so tough on Firmino that day.

“He said it was his job to make sure Firmino realised his full potential,” grins Tanner, before breaking into laughter. “Then he asked how the hell I watched that training session when it was closed to the public.”

For Tanner, Firmino’s thick skin said plenty about his character, and helped to convince him of the teenage attacker’s potential value to Hoffenheim.

“Many younger players would have walked off the training pitch following that amount of treatment,” admits the sporting director. “But Firmino stuck it out. I liked that.”

UNUSUALLY FOR A STRIKER, FIRMINO IS EASILY OUTSCORED BY THOSE EITHER SIDE OF HIM – BUT THAT IS WHY THEY WORK SO WELL TOGETHER

It wasn’t the only thing Tanner admired.

“At a club like Hoffenheim, you need a No. 10 who can work in both directions,” he explains. “You need someone possessing the qualities of a playmaker, but who is willing to put in the defensive work. Brazilians are always brilliant with the ball at their feet but rarely willing to defend. Firmino was different.”

Hoffenheim moved fast to sign the starlet, agreeing to pay his € 4 million release clause. With that, he could do what he had always wanted for his family.

“One of the requiremen­ts was that Firmino needed a signing- on fee,” reveals Tanner. “He wanted to buy a house for his family, because the area they lived in was desperatel­y poor. It was so dangerous in his slum that we couldn’t visit him there.”

BECOMING A BREAKOUT BUNDESLIGA STAR

Firmino arrived at Hoffenheim in January 2011, midway through the campaign, with his new club eighth in the Bundesliga. However, any hopes they had of immediatel­y adding him to their attack were soon dashed.

“We did some tests when he arrived and we couldn’t believe the results,” Tanner tells FFT.

“We had to repeat them, they were that bad. The demanding Brazilian season, playing three times a week and travelling thousands of miles between matches, had really taken its toll. His condition was shocking.”

The revised plan was to focus on getting him fit ahead of the following season. Part of that process included picking him in friendlies for Hoffenheim’s under- 23s, coached at the time by Markus Gisdol.

“He came to play with us on a number of occasions and I got to know him well,” recalls Gisdol, now in charge of Köln in the top flight. “He was very skinny and needed time to grow. German football requires a particular level of athleticis­m and he wasn’t quite there yet – but technicall­y speaking, you could soon tell that he was a player of real quality.”

To everyone’s surprise, Firmino hit full fitness within a few weeks. With neither European qualificat­ion nor relegation likely, Hoffenheim could afford to test him sooner than expected. “We managed to build his endurance and get him into a strong condition very quickly,” says Tanner, “and he actually made his Bundesliga debut that February.”

Three goals in 11 appearance­s ( and a total of 470 minutes) was a solid return given the circumstan­ces, and Firmino followed it up with seven strikes in his first complete campaign.

“The style we played suited him,” explains Tanner. “We were playing with fast transition­s, and he’s the kind of player who thrives in that system. He was the perfect age, too: 19 years old, in his prime learning years.”

“In terms of personalit­y, Firmino really was a coach’s dream – an absolute profession­al,” enthuses Gisdol. “I can’t remember a single training session in which I needed to motivate him or criticise his effort.”

For a young Brazilian more than 6,000 miles from home, the presence of compatriot­s was

vital in easing Firmino’s integratio­n, even if Luiz Gustavo soon left for Bayern Munich.

“We had a goalkeepin­g coach called Cesar Thier, a Brazilian- German,” adds Pfannensti­el, who arrived a month after Firmino. “He looked after Roberto a lot in those early days. I also talked with him often about our experience­s playing in Brazil.”

Hoffenheim were almost relegated from the Bundesliga in Firmino’s third season – 2012- 13 – but they were saved by the return of Gisdol, who was appointed first- team coach in April after a spell as Schalke’s assistant manager. His arrival had a huge impact on the Brazilian’s developmen­t in Germany.

“Having already worked with Roberto during my time with the under- 23s, I knew what to expect when I returned,” Gisdol tells FFT. “He had been developing really well, but I wanted to help him take his game to the next level.”

Firmino was then outstandin­g in 2013- 14. He scored 22 goals in all competitio­ns, adding 15 assists for good measure, to be named the Bundesliga’s breakout star that year.

“He was just fantastic,” says Gisdol, proudly. “He gave 100 per cent every single day. If you are that focused and willing to put in the work, your talent will take off. We saw the results of that effort throughout the season.”

Pfanennsti­el continues, “I think he realised early on at Hoffenheim that talent alone would not be enough to succeed. I always say now that Roberto has the skill of a Brazilian and the mentality of a German. That’s what makes him such a special player, and he discovered that combinatio­n at Hoffenheim.”

In November 2014 came Firmino’s ultimate reward: his first Brazil caps and goal, scoring a late winner in Austria. He stuck around for the season at Hoffenheim, netting seven goals and laying on another 13 for his team- mates, but an upward move was inevitable. Brendan Rodgers’ Liverpool won the fight, paying € 41m in the summer of 2015, and if there had been doubts when Firmino arrived in Europe, there were none about this next chapter.

“He was ready to play in the Premier League, without question,” beams Tanner. “You could see his improvemen­t, month by month.

“He couldn’t play for Hoffenheim any more – he had surpassed that level.”

BOBBY DAZZLES THE KOP

Liverpool were ready for change of their own, after a 2014– 15 campaign in which they had followed up the previous season’s title tilt by finishing a miserable sixth. Eight games into Firmino’s time at Anfield, Rodgers was sacked, replaced by Jurgen Klopp. According to Paul Gorst of the Liverpool Echo, both the timing and the replacemen­t were perfect for Firmino.

“Liverpool’s transfer committee identified Firmino as a target, although Rodgers wanted Aston Villa’s Christian Benteke instead,” Gorst tells FFT. “In the end, both came, but Rodgers struggled to find room for Firmino – he was even shoved in at wing- back at Old Trafford.

“Klopp put him straight in as a central striker. He liked Daniel Sturridge, but he was injured too often. Firmino was more reliable on that front and, coupled with his defensive diligence, he soon became irreplacea­ble.”

On November 21, 2015, the Reds – in 10th – visited leaders Manchester City for a daunting clash at the Etihad Stadium. Liverpool raced into a 3- 0 lead inside 32 minutes and won 4- 1.

“Firmino scored Liverpool’s third and harried City’s defenders all afternoon,” says Gorst. “He was absolutely brilliant, and he has gone from strength to strength ever since.”

So did Liverpool under Klopp. The signings of Sadio Mané and Mohamed Salah in successive pre- seasons completed the Premier League’s most devastatin­g front three, as evidenced by their combined 209- goal haul ( pre- coronaviru­s outbreak) since the beginning of the 2017- 18 campaign. Unusually for a striker, Firmino is comfortabl­y outscored by those either side of him, but that’s why they work so well together.

“Firmino is the ideal foil for Salah and Mané,” insists Gorst. “Those two were last season’s

Golden Boot winners, but without Firmino they wouldn’t get anywhere near those kinds of numbers. Liverpool fans would like to see him score more goals, of course, but when he does, they’re invariably important ones.”

But none of those goals have been as key as his two overhead kicks on trial at Figueirens­e 13 years ago. Unsurprisi­ngly, Tanner counts Firmino among his greatest achievemen­ts as a talentspot­ter.

“I’ve had a hand in signing a lot of players down the years – some that have even gone on to represent Germany,” he reveals. “But I’d have to say Firmino is the best I’ve found. You never know what might happen in the future when you see a young player – you imagine, but never know. Roberto is a good example of what you can do if you really put your heart and soul into it.”

There are good discoverie­s, there are great discoverie­s, and then there are discoverie­s like Bobby Firmino.

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Right ... and he’s never taken his eye off the ball
Above Firmino was soon scoring braces as well as wearing them... Right ... and he’s never taken his eye off the ball
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 ??  ?? Firmino had netted in England before he moved to England, with a March 2015 friendly winner against Chile at the Emirates
A scorer of crucial goals
Firmino had netted in England before he moved to England, with a March 2015 friendly winner against Chile at the Emirates A scorer of crucial goals
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