Tell us never
Tackie Lad!!!
What a finish by Divvy lad
DIVOCKK OMG
The man for the big occasion
If Liverpool make the final, make Divock captain for it.
Sensational goal. Himself and Taki lad are doing untold in the Milk Cup this season.
âThe ball, the ball, they hardly touched the ball, we played the Mancs on a Sunday night and they hardly touched the ballâ.
Just goes to show how bad the injury crisis was, our best centre back from last year canât even get in the team for the Coca Cola cup
Curtis Lad had Ronaldo hopping like sausages in a pan when he couldnât get the ball off him.
@caulifloweredneanderthal get onto the landlord at the Inn and bulk order these in time for the Christmas Dinner
THIS MEANS MORE
Like a new signing.
Jamie Carragher meets Arrigo Sacchi: âLiverpool are a masterpiece - Man Utd have been thrown togetherâ
Sacchi on Jurgen Klopp, England having the best coaches in the world and why he was never fully understood in Italy
JAMIE CARRAGHER29 October 2021 ⢠1:30pm
âI took the view that the club â its tradition and its style, its identity â always comes before the player,â former AC Milan manager Sacchi tells Jamie Carragher CREDIT: Steve Bisgrove
Iam in the Italian countryside, sipping a glass of Lambrusco and talking football with Arrigo Sacchi. Welcome to my idea of heaven.
Sacchi holds court like a truth-giver; a wise, ageing oracle whose advice modern coaches will travel from across the world to his villa to seek.
Twenty-five years ago Arsene Wenger sought the counsel of the two-time European Cup winner. Two weeks ago Thomas Tuchel was here.
âWe started talking and the next thing we knew it was 2am,â Sacchi told me.
A JĂźrgen Klopp visit â postponed due to the pandemic â is pending. This weekend an exhibition in Sacchiâs village in Fusignano will be attended by luminaries Marcello Lippi, Alberto Zaccheroni and Antonio Conte.
I met him 24 hours after my beloved Liverpool humiliated Manchester United, led by the manager who cites Sacchi as his greatest coaching influence.
I cannot resist seizing the moment.
âDid you watch the match yesterday, Arrigo?â
âThis Liverpool team is a masterpiece,â he replies.
âA fantastic team without any real superstars. A true team. You see one playing for eleven, while other teams are eleven playing for themselves. 80 per cent of the time, they are moving when they have the ball. If they were an orchestra they would always be in perfect tune and in perfect time.â
And what of Manchester United?
His response is more diplomatic but in its way damning.
âAt the 2014 World Cup, one of the Brazilian television stations asked me what I thought of the Brazil team,â he said.
âI told them, I didnât see a team. I saw eleven individuals, thrown together on the pitch.â
I am in awe during this interview. Football is built around the great coaches who enrich the game. A select few change it forever.
Sacchiâs Milan side won the European Cup in 1989 and 1990 as well as Serie A in 1988 CREDIT: Bob Thomas Sports Photography via Getty Images
Sacchi is more than a legendary manager. He is one of the architects of modern football, arguably the most influential in the last 40 years.
Look around European football and wherever you see high pressing and compact, synchronised, high line defending, you will find a coach working to Sacchiâs blueprint â that which was most obvious in his extraordinary AC Milan side of the Eighties.
âFootball is about collective intelligence,â says Sacchi, summing up his ideas.
I am eager to know where his plan to revolutionise playing style; the abandonment of the âsweeperâ which was so dominant in Italian football, and the coordinated defensive patterns which could be used as an attacking weapon - winning the ball far higher up the pitch â came from. His replies constantly reference the characteristics of his players â their willingness to set aside their ego for the team â as much as his tactical instructions. As Italy manager, he famously picked 120 players during his five-year spell, seeking the elite 22 with the mental and physical capacity to execute his vision.
âThere were always four things I would look for in a player: intelligence, modesty, humility and desire,â he says.
âWhen I first arrived at Milan there was a player I didnât want because I found out he would go out every night and sleep at the training ground. [Silvio] Berlusconi [AC Milanâs owner at the time] asked me, âwell, who should we sign?â I told him nobody â we should use his understudy, because he was modest and he wanted to learn.
âAlessandro Costacurta said that he thought I would be gone in a month.
âThe profile and the mentality of the player was vital. Daniele Massaro was a technically excellent player but at the start he did not work as hard, so he had to learn. Ruud Gullit was a massive influence not just technically, but from a human point of view. His spirit was as important as his talent.
âHard work, as well as the style of play, was at the heart of everything.â
Sacchi saw his ideas as an evolution of the Dutch way, evolving the patterns of Rinus Michelsâ sides and applying the same discipline without the ball as with it.
âThere are three great teams, each 20 years after the other,â he says.
âThe Ajax of [Rinus] Michels, my Milan and the Barcelona of Pep.
âAjax â that total football team â was a big influence. And when I was a kid, I loved the Real Madrid of Di Stefano, Puskas and Gento. Football for me has always been a show; a spectacle. Its purpose is to entertain. Winning without style is no victory at all.â
Sacchiâs triumph in Milan is chronicled in the book, The Immortals, released this week.
Incredible as it seems now, players and potential employers were initially sceptical of his concepts. After curtailing playing ambitions due to injury, he began coaching the children in his village before taking over his local club aged 26. From there he sought to rip up notions of Italian football as defensive masters of man-to-man marking, the country at that time revelling in its reputation for taking the lead and then managing the game to secure a narrow win.
âI took the view that the club â its tradition and its style, its identity â always comes before the player,â he says.
âIn Italy, until then, it had been the other way around â the individual was always deified.
âFootball always reflects the culture and the history of the country. Italyâs history after the time of the Romans was not great â invaded by everyone, and always running away. I thought it was possible to have an Italian team that played on the front foot and in a positive fashion. Mentality is always important.
âI knew it was impossible that we couldnât attack and thought it was better to attack than to be attacked. Having possession, you learn more. You are the boss of the ball.
âAnd the closer to the opposition goal you win back the ball, the higher the chance of scoring.
âI wasnât sure about my ideas at first, but we worked and worked. I always wanted to work with intelligent people, because when you give them a concept, they improve it themselves. They become the ones driving the process.
âBy the time I arrived in Milan [in 1987], one of the most important Italian papers said: âTomorrow, Milan will unveil Mr Nobodyâ. But they ignored the 14 years of hard work I had done by then. I had won trophies and never been sacked.
âThe players at the time like Franco Baresi werenât hostile to the changes, but they were wary. That was the challenge I faced everywhere I went â in the fourth division, there was a player who was the same age as me and who had played in Serie A. I came out of the dressing room one day and I heard this guy talking to the other players, he said: âthis guy is either a genius or a madmanâ.â
In his near three-decades of coaching, Sacchi managed Milan, Atletico Madrid and Italy, winning numerous major honours CREDIT: Steve Bisgrove
Even when his methods enjoyed instant success â winning Serie A in his first season at the San Siro â it took time for outsiders to grasp his changes.
âThere was a time when my wife and I were at a restaurant and a famous Italian journalist, Gianni Brera, was at another table,â he recalls.
âWe were about to play Napoli and he came over to me and asked who I was going to use to man-mark Maradona. My wife, who had no interest in football and didnât watch any matches, said: âDonât you use zonal marking?â
âI said to her, âeither we arenât doing it right or this guy doesnât understandâ.â
By 1988, with Milan on their way to the first of successive European Cups, the San Siro was recognised as the foremost footballing university for the next generation of coaches.
âNone of those Milan players had even reached the quarter finals of the European Cup before,â he says.
âWe played Bayern Munich in the semi-final and won 1-0 at home. We went away without Gullit, [Roberto] Donadoni and [Carlo] Ancelotti. At half time we had already had 11 shots on goal, to one for Bayern. At that point I knew they understood that it was better to attack than defend and that highly-organised pressing was lethal.â
Invitations to share his methods became frequent.
âOnce, I was invited over to England by the FA, to speak about my Milan team,â he recalls.
âThere was another time when a group of French coaches came to watch my team train: Gerard Houllier, Luis Fernandez, Arsene Wenger. They said they had never seen a team work so hard.â
So where does he see his methods enforced most effectively today?
âEngland now has the best coaches in the world,â he says.
âPep and Klopp are two greats who allow football to move forward. Without coaches like that, football dies.
âI watched Liverpool play Barcelona and I was emotional. I was emotional because it was not just a team winning, it was an entire city. In the next life, I want to be a coach in England.
âThe football intelligence of the fans was always different in England. But I am worried because the clubs are being bought by people from America and the Middle East who do not share that understanding.â
If there is a sense of regret, it is how Sacchiâs ideas have been successfully exported around the world, but are less visible in Serie A.
âThe lesson of Milan has been learned and developed everywhere except Italy,â he says, ruefully.
âThe prophet is never welcome in his own country.â
The Immortals by Arrigo Sacchi is out now in paperback and ebook , published by BackPage
Jamie couldnât say âlambruscoâ without gobbing on the table.