The New Zealand Herald

Dutch treat: Tiptoeing by the ‘Iron Tulip’

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This year’s World Cup wasn’t part of the plan for Louis van Gaal. In fact, it was a major inconvenie­nce.

He was retired when the Dutch football federation asked him last year to manage the national team for a third time. He was days away from turning 70. And he was also being treated for aggressive prostate cancer. He still took the job.

“Because, simply, no one else was available at that time,” Van Gaal said.

So started the final assignment for one of football’s most successful managers, a man who has taken charge of and won trophies with Ajax, Barcelona, Bayern Munich and Manchester United and who has now extended his coaching career past 30 years by answering his country’s call for the World Cup in Qatar.

Van Gaal may have initially stepped up more out of a sense of duty than any burning personal ambition to get back into the game. It’s still opened up one more chance to win the big prize for the Netherland­s, who have lost three World Cup finals and went out in the semifinals in a penalty shootout in 2014 when Van Gaal was manager the last time.

The current team beat Senegal 2-0 with two late goals in their World Cup opener yesterday, giving Van Gaal a 38th win as Dutch manager, a national record and another indicator of his pedigree.

Might that milestone be the start of a fairy tale run through this World Cup for the man they call the Iron

Tulip? Maybe, but if it is to be a glorious final chapter for Van Gaal the manager, who has said he will definitely retire after this World Cup, it will be no fairy tale.

It’ll rather be reward for a lot of hard work if Van Gaal’s reputation as one of the sternest disciplina­rians and most intense men in the game still holds, even after a five-year retirement and a health scare as serious as cancer.

Van Gaal smirked, just slightly, when his reputation was raised again at this World Cup. It was suggested to him that he had been “angry” for an entire spell as Barcelona manager earlier in his career, for example. It was surely time to mellow a little.

“I never changed. I never changed as a person,” Van Gaal said. “Perhaps I may have gained some experience.”

And he doesn’t expect to now, even if he’s 71 and the oldest manager at this World Cup. His fierce recent criticism of awarding the World Cup to Qatar is proof of that.

His current players have no problem with that character, which captain Virgil van Dijk referred to as “direct”, although Van Gaal is sometimes angry and almost always stern.

“He’s a great human being,” Van Dijk said.

Added forward Vincent Janssen: “He always knows how to motivate us.”

Van Gaal’s own dedication to this World Cup campaign has been clear.

He gave up his retirement — no doubt partly spent at his holiday home in Portugal’s Algarve region — to guide a new generation of Dutch players when it wasn’t something he’s really set his sights on doing.

He managed for a little while from a wheelchair last year after falling off his bike at a training camp and breaking a bone in his hip. He wouldn’t take any time off. And then there’s the cancer. Although he was first diagnosed with it in 2020, Van Gaal didn’t immediatel­y tell his players when he was appointed manager in August 2021, thinking the details of his disease and the gruelling treatment he was undergoing while in charge of them would be a distractio­n. He put the team first.

He finally announced he had cancer, and was hopefully on the way to beating it, earlier this year.

“When the news came out, it was a shock for us,” Van Dijk said. “It was tough . . . but we wanted to be there for him. And we will definitely go the extra yards knowing also that this is the last World Cup for him.”

I never changed. I never changed as a person. Perhaps I may have gained some experience..

Louis van Gaal

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Louis van Gaal came out of retirement despite a major cancer scare.
Photo / AP Louis van Gaal came out of retirement despite a major cancer scare.

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