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Now with Zenit, Mancini is out to end European hoodoo in Glasgow

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Adistingui­shed, disparate set of managers line up in the round of 32 in the Europa League.

There are previous winners, such as Diego Simeone, who has taken his Atletico Madrid to a pair of Uefa Champions League finals but will never speak patronisin­gly about Europa’s secondary club competitio­n.

Atletico’s Europa League triumph in 2012 was the springboar­d for their modern revival, Simeone always maintains.

There are those for whom Europe has been a frustratin­g hurdle such as Arsene Wenger, who has never won a major European trophy but has finished second in each of the Champions League, the Uefa Cup and the defunct Cup Winners Cup in his long career. Or Simeone’s former Lazio teammate Roberto Mancini, who brings his Zenit Saint Petersburg to Glasgow for the first leg of a tie against Celtic entitled to think his fortunes in European competitio­ns are overdue for a turn for the better.

Mancini’s Premier League and Serie A trophies as a manager recommend him as an elite member of his profession.

But Europe has been a bugbear for longer than he cares to remember.

Today will be the 53-yearold Italian’s 116th European match as a manager. None of those have been finals.

He came into management young, dashing and admired.

There were a few older Italians who complained his elevation to a Serie A job – at Fiorentina – within weeks of his retiring as a player was too fast-tracked, and that he had not served a proper apprentice­ship.

He was 36, and quickly his hair grew grayer. Fiorentina were on the edge of bankruptcy at the time, but he worked wonders on scant resources.

Mancini was not yet 40 when he guided Lazio, another club counting the cost of having

Our challenge is that we haven’t played any competitiv­e football for a while. This will be our first official game since December ROBERTO MANCINI Zenit manager

built up large debts, to the semi-finals of the Uefa Cup in 2003. His bad luck was to run into another ambitious young manager, one Jose Mourinho, whose Porto went on to win the competitio­n.

Then, as the jobs got bigger, the European campaigns got shorter. Mancini resurrecte­d Inter Milan as a force within Italy, breaking an 18-year drought for a league title, and going on to guide Inter to three successive Serie A crowns.

But in Europe, they retreated: Quarter-finalists twice in the Champions League, then twice knocked out at the last-16 stage under Mancini.

His Manchester City, famously cool under pressure when they won the 2011/12 Premier League in the dramatic final seconds of the season, turned naive and panicky in Europe.

As English champions they even contrived to go through a whole group phase without a win.

The previous season, on one notorious night at Bayern Munich, Mancini asked his striker Carlos Tevez to step off the bench, and warm up to try and retrieve a losing situation and alleged that Tevez said no.

The repercussi­ons of that meltdown lasted months.

Mancini did take Galatasara­y to an unlikely last-16 spot, guiding the Turkish club out of a group that included Juventus and Real Madrid.

His memory of Celtic Park meanwhile, is positive. In his second spell at Inter, which ended in 2016, he came to Glasgow and, on a Europa League night of pure adrenaline, see-sawed through a 3-3 draw, Inter winning the second leg 1-0.

That, his last adventure in the knockout stages of Europe, was a good as it got as Wolfsburg disposed of Inter at the last-16 stage.

Mancini knows the stadium will hum tonight.

“I remember the incredible atmosphere here,” he said, braced against the damp cold that ordinarily would not bother his Russian players but as they are freshly arrived from winter-break training in Turkey, seemed arresting.

“Our challenge is that we haven’t played any competitiv­e football for a while,” Mancini said. “This will be our first official game since December and that is a disadvanta­ge.”

The mid-season break in the Russian Premier League, where Zenit are second in the table, lasts until March.

Mancini hopes striker Alex Kokorin, above all, can shake off any rustiness.

The Russia internatio­nal, expected to spearhead his country’s attack at his home World Cup, has a big year ahead. He comes into 2018 in form, with eight Europa League goals so far.

“He’s improving in all facets and has the making of a champion,” Mancini said.

 ??  ?? Roberto Mancini will take charge of his 116th European match as a manager. Despite stops in Manchester City and Inter Milan, none of those have been in a final Getty
Roberto Mancini will take charge of his 116th European match as a manager. Despite stops in Manchester City and Inter Milan, none of those have been in a final Getty

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