Business Day

Pochettino, Zidane take different roads

• Europe clash sets stage for fascinatin­g duel

- Agency Staff London

When Tottenham clash with Real Madrid in the Champions League at Wembley on Wednesday, the glamour tie will provide the backdrop for a fascinatin­g sideline duel between Mauricio Pochettino and Zinedine Zidane.

When Tottenham clash with Real Madrid in the Champions League at Wembley on Wednesday, the glamour tie will provide the backdrop for a fascinatin­g dugout duel between Mauricio Pochettino and Zinedine Zidane.

Tottenham boss Pochettino and Madrid coach Zidane are both highly regarded managers who have assembled teams capable of winning Europe’s elite club prize, but the pair could not have taken more contrastin­g journeys to the top of their profession.

Pochettino, 45, has enjoyed a transforma­tion from journeyman Argentinia­n defender to coveted coach, while Zidane, of the same age, is the French World Cup winner whose brilliance in his playing career has been followed by even more success in the dugout.

The son of a Santa Fe farm worker, Pochettino was brought up with a tenacious work ethic that fuelled his rise from those humble roots.

“As a boy, all I thought about was football, football, football. It was everything,” he said.

Fighting to claw out a career as an uncompromi­sing defender was no hardship for Pochettino, who made his profession­al debut with Newell’s Old Boys in 1988 and won the Argentinia­n Primera Division in 1991. Pochettino’s rugged reputation earned him a move to Espanyol in 1994, but he toiled in relative anonymity in Spain, winning only the Copa del Rey in 2000.

Zidane savoured some of his finest moments on the internatio­nal stage, but Pochettino won only 20 caps and his most memorable contributi­on was to concede the penalty that led to England’s 1-0 win over Argentina at the 2002 World Cup.

While Pochettino had a rural childhood, Zidane was raised on the mean streets of Marseille’s La Castellane district, where he forged his potent combinatio­n of balletic grace on the ball with a streetfigh­ter’s mentality.

After learning his trade at Cannes and Bordeaux, the midfield maestro establishe­d himself as a superstar under Juventus boss Marcello Lippi.

“Lippi was like a light switch for me. Before that, football was about enjoying myself. After I arrived in Turin, the desire to win things took over and never left me,” Zidane said.

While Pochettino’s trophy cabinet gathered dust, Zidane hoovered up two Serie A titles with Juventus, before helping Real’s star-studded “galacticos” win La Liga and the Champions League. The latter was secured thanks to Zidane’s sublime strike in the 2002 final against Bayer Leverkusen, while his majestic displays led France to glory at the 1998 World Cup and 2000 European Championsh­ip.

Pochettino, hugely influenced by his coach at Newell’s Old Boys, Marcelo Bielsa, applied the lessons he learnt there to seize his chance when Espanyol came calling in 2009.

Saving Espanyol from relegation, Pochettino kept them afloat for another two years with little investment in the squad.

The offer to manage Southampto­n in 2013 was a “dream” for Pochettino, who won over his squad despite intense training sessions that led Jack Cork to say you need “two hearts” to play for him. After taking Southampto­n to eighth place in his second season, Pochettino was hired by Tottenham in 2014, leading them to third and second place in the past two years.

Obsessive about every detail, Pochettino even chooses the laundry detergent used to wash the first-team kit, while he bombards players with motivation­al text messages day and night.

“To me, if a player doesn’t work hard for the team, he won’t play. Nothing happens by chance,” he said.

While Pochettino remains without a trophy in his managerial career, Zidane appeared to have been parachuted into the dream scenario when he was appointed Real boss in January 2016. Zidane’s only experience had been as assistant to former Madrid manager Carlo Ancelotti, before a brief spell as the club’s reserve coach.

Yet Zidane has had the Midas touch, leading Real to seven trophies, including Champions League crowns in 2016 and 2017 and the La Liga title last season.

Just days after winning coach of the year at Fifa’s awards gala, Zidane is faced with a searching test of his coaching credential­s.

Beaten by minnows Girona on Sunday, Real are eight points behind the leaders in La Liga, Barcelona, forcing Zidane to admit he still has much to learn.

“I don’t think I’m the best in the world. I’m lucky to be at the best club in the world with the best players,” he said.

 ?? /Reuters, Getty Images ?? Sideline encounter: Mauricio Pochettino of Tottenham, left, and Real Madrid’s Zinedine Zidane … two of the top coaches in Europe come face to face in London on Wednesday.
/Reuters, Getty Images Sideline encounter: Mauricio Pochettino of Tottenham, left, and Real Madrid’s Zinedine Zidane … two of the top coaches in Europe come face to face in London on Wednesday.

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