Born in Mozambique and a former coach of the South African soccer side, Portugal’s Carlos Queiroz has flown to the Rainbow Nation countless times but said Sunday’s flight to the World Cup finals was a unique moment and the culmination of an old dream.
“I have no idea how many times I’ve made this trip to South Africa or Mozambique but this is the trip,” Queiroz, 57, told reporters on the flight between Lisbon and Johannesburg on Sunday.
“It’s the trip that has a unique meaning for it represents the start of an adventure which results from a career project, a life project, many years dreaming of taking the Portugal national side to the World Cup,” he added.
The coach won two World Youth Championships early in his career, leading future stars like Luis Figo and Rui Costa to back-to-back titles in 1989 and 1991.
But he then tasted disappointment when he failed to qualify that group of players known as Portugal’s Golden Generation to the 1994 World Cup as the senior team manager.
The finals will also offer Queiroz the chance to make amends for a later World Cup disappointment.
He led the South African national team to qualify for the 2002 tournament in Japan and South Korea but was sacked just months before the finals.
“It was sad because the reasons for which I was pushed away from the team had nothing to do with football, they had to do with things of life, which can happen in South Africa or any other country,” Queiroz said.
“It had to do with people and sometimes we meet the wrong people at the wrong time and things don’t go well. But I kept much warmth for the people in this land in which we are going to play,” he added.
(Editing by Jon Bramley; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)
Food, not money may be key to winning cricketer’s compliance on the field: Wisden
London, Apr.9 (ANI): It seems, that the way to win a cricketer’s compliance on the filed of play is not through his wallet, but through his stomach.
In its 146th edition, Wisden Cricketers’ Almanack editor Scyld Berry has decried the funereal pace of Test cricket and suggests that “The ICC should adopt the adage: the way to a man’s heart is through his stomach.”
Berry warns that fielding sides who drag out play could soon become unpopular with umpires who would miss out on putting their feet up, commentators who want their lunch and caterers who want to sell theirs.
In 2008, the average Test over-rate was down to 13.79 overs an hour. It’s appalling that over rates around the world haven’t reached even 14 an hour for so long,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Berry, as saying.
However, it’s not just players, particularly captains, who are to blame, with Berry raising the case of play being disrupted when England played India at Chennai so that a banana could be brought out for umpire Billy Bowden.
Berry argues that during play, the boundaries should be sealed, with no one entering or leaving the field in anything other than exceptional circumstances.
Although, in many instances, time is made up at the end of the day, that only increases the demands on spectators and, as Berry points out, is frequently not possible in the tropics, where daylight hours are limited.
“It needs to start with each board sitting their captain down and telling them, ‘Your job is going to be in jeopardy if you don’t maintain the over rate’,” he said.
“And the ICC needs to sit the umpires down and say, ‘It’s your job to maintain the tempo. This faffing around, talking between overs, has got to stop’. “
But commentator and former coach of Pakistan Geoff Lawson thinks the argument doesn’t stand up.
“I’ve just been in South Africa and witnessed some pretty good cricket and I didn’t hear anybody talk about over rates once. I think it’s all down to the quality you’re seeing. I think it became less of an issue in the last six months,” Lawson said.(ANI)