The Zen Of Sven

Published: 23 May 2004 y., Sunday
When he was appointed manager of England in January 2001, Sven-Göran Eriksson became the first foreigner to take on the second most important job in the country. Leaving Lazio, where he was adored by fans for winning the league and the UEFA Cup for the Roman club for the first time in years, the Swedish manager very quickly discovered that he had arrived in a suspicious and cynical country. At his first press conference in early 2001, some journalists did their best to catch Eriksson out by asking if, for example, he could name the Leicester City goalkeeper. The calm and measured Swede smiled, his watchful blue eyes reserved but not quite icy, and said: "I assure you that when I come here, I will know everything about the English game... Yes, I am from Sweden, but I can't help that." When someone asked about the reputed £15m he was to earn over five years as England coach, he shrugged: "I didn't take this job for the money, or for the weather, that is for sure. I could have earned more money if I'd stayed in Italy or Spain." England players quizzed about the secret of Sven's success always say he doesn't speak much. Just enough to give them confidence and ease their anxiety. He doesn't see the point in losing his temper during training and he always maintains his self-discipline during games.
Šaltinis: businessweek.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Out of Olympics

Martina Hingis , the top-ranked female tennis player in the world, said she will not participate in the Sydney Olympics. more »

Armstrong holds lead after Botero stage win

Colombian Santiago Botero of Kelme won the 14th stage of the Tour de France. more »

The Dortmund Supertournament got a whole new start in round six!

World number two Vladimir Kramnik defeated his long-time rival Viswanathan Anand in a wild game. more »

The Euro 2000 semifinal

The Euro 2000 semifinal between France and Portugal ended in chaos as Portuguese players erupted in fury at referee Guenter Benko's decision to award a controversial late penalty against them. more »

Turkish coach sends home one of his players

Turkish national team coach Mustafa Denizli sent home Glasgow Rangers player Tugay Kerimoglu, because he threw a bottle of water. more »

Schumacher made a flying start Montreal Grand Prix, Canada

Ferrari's Michael Schumacher has won the Montreal Grand Prix more »

EURO 2000: France victorious over Czech Republic

World Cup champion France beat the Czech Republic 2-1 Friday to nearly secure a spot in the quarterfinals of the European Soccer Championship and push the Czechs close to elimination. more »

Italy goes on top of Group B with 2-0 win

Italy's continued its impressive play in Euro 2000 on Wednesday with a 2-0 win over co-host Belgium in Brussels. more »

Czechs Beat Slovaks To Retain World Crown

Olympic champions Czech Republic retained the world ice hockey title when they beat neighbors Slovakia 5-3 in a highly charged final on Sunday. more »

Leeds 3-1 Watford

Leeds cruised to a comfortable win over relegated Watford to greatly improve theirchances of a Champions League place next season. more »