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The case for Diego Simeone

shelfmonkey

Weird is different, different is interesting.
Mar 21, 2007
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As there seem to be a few 'The case for(fill blank)' threads, thought I'd join in :)


Simeone has sparked Atletico revolution by moulding club in his image
6 November 2013

Jonathan Fadugba





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ATLÉTICO MADRID, DIEGO SIMEONE, LA LIGA, DIEGO COSTA,ARDA TURAN, KOKE, UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE,FOURFOURTWO
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FourFourTwo's Jonathan Fadugba looks at the man behind Atletico Madrid's recent renaissance, Diego Simeone....

The best football managers have always possessed a unique ability to mould a club in their own image. From Shankly to Ferguson to Guardiola: over the course of history, the greatest coaches tend to wield such influence that they are able to shape the entire organisation into a reflection of their own personality and vision.

“Leaders establish a way of being in their organisations, through what they think, believe, say and do,” says Mike Carson in his book The Manager – Inside the Minds of Football’s Leaders. “They impart some sort of fingerprint – some DNA- that is intimately associated with their character, which drives the behaviours and performance of their people and leaves a clearly defined legacy.”

Diego Simeone is only 43, yet already the battle-hardened Argentinian is demonstrating a trait prevalent in the game’s greatest and most-experienced coaches.

Since joining Atletico Madrid as coach in December 2011, Simeone has transformed an ailing club into one with a winning swagger. When ‘El Cholo’ was appointed, Atleti were in dire straits: without a domestic trophy since 1996, going through managers quicker than geeks through gadgets and endowed with a near-institutionalised spirit of defeatism.

“There was too much negativity about in the psyche of the supporters and that fed into the players,” concedes Diego Forlan in the December issue of FourFourTwo magazine. “They were used to failure.”

Look at Atleti now, however, and the mindset has completely changed. In less than two years, the Argentinian has reversed the defeatist streak, winning the Europa League, UEFA Super Cup and Copa del Rey in the process. This season, Atleti have won 11 of 12 league games and top their Champions League group with a 100% win record. Simeone has turned them into serial winners.

"You. Yeah, you. Score a goal."


Perhaps as impressive as the trophies Simeone has one - if not more so - is the way in which ‘El Cholo’ has completely rebuilt the team to his own specification during that period.

The one-time bustling midfielder, who described his own playing style as that of a man “holding a knife between his teeth” has bestowed the same fearsome, frenzied passion for success upon Atleti’s setup as that which he carried through an illustrious career. Simeone’s values, energy and enthusiasm have proved infectious.

The team play with wild-eyed intensity; harrying and chasing in midfield to restrict space and suffocate their opponents’ attacking instincts. Lining his team up in a compact 4-4-2 formation, Simeone demands aggression and commitment from his players, and gets it.

Atletico lead La Liga for tackles per game this season, up from third in the division last term – and in Gabi and Filipe Luis, Atleti boast two of the league’s top four tacklers.

They also have that same snarling, combative, slightly sinister streak Beckham-botherer Simeone was known for during his playing career as a rugged defensive midfielder. Atleti are fourth in La Liga for fouls per game, with Mario Suarez and the fiery Diego Costa – the personification of Simeone on the field – two of the league’s guilty top ten for fouls committed.

“Atletico has always been a team packed with big players, international players,” said Zenit Saint Petersburg’s Argentinian defender Cristian Ansaldi before they met Atletico in the Champions League in September. “The change Simeone has brought about is in giving the team aggression. Atletico never won anything because they only had quality and lacked intensity and aggression. This is what Simeone has managed to bring.”

Simply put, Simeone’s Atletico Madrid is a true relection of himself.



"Not the face!" Simeone was a combative midfielder in his playing days.


To get a true sense of this, you need only listen to his players. For the most vivid reflection of how Simeone’s players unequivocally embrace and embody his own vision is in the words they speak.

Simeone’s core beliefs are in the strength of the collective, continuous striving for self-improvement, fierce commitment to the cause and approaching the game like there’s no tomorrow. “I try to live each day like it’s the last, with enthusiasm and ideas which I communicate to my players. Football is my life,” Simeone tells FourFourTwo. “I always think they are going to fire me tomorrow, so I only focus on winning on Sunday. I live that way.”

"Experience makes you read situations better. I am intuitive. Before the Super Cup final, I did not like the behaviour of two players. I told them what I thought. If I see something I say it. Before I used to hesitate more. The more spontaneous I am, the better everything is."

The question is; has the once renowned hot-head calmed with age and experience?

"When the team win, a coach can be calm," Simeone says. "When my team wins I am also calm. But look at Mourinho when he screams to celebrate a goal and slides on his knees like in the Champions League against (Manchester) City.

"I feel I have evolved, my experiences as a coach have helped me because I have been in different situations. At Catania, it was about fighting relegation. I was not used to seeing five players in the middle, but I’m glad I did. I learned to adapt."

Adapting is something Atletico's players had to do upon Simeone's arrival, but their commitment to and admiration for their manager is clear. Dip into any interview with a Rojiblancos star from the last twelve months and you can guarantee you'll hear them not only eulogise their manager, but also echo his philosophy in the very words they speak.

“[Simeone] has been important not only for me, but the whole group,” says Diego Costa, La Liga’s joint top scorer, a player given such a revitalising new lease of life by his manager that Brazil and Spain are locked in an international tug of war for his services.

“He’s changed our way of thinking. He asks us to get into every single game as if it were the last one of our careers, demanding you leave all you can on the pitch, always showing that there’s room for growing. It wasn’t like this before his arrival.”



Simeone has transformed Diego Costa in one of Europe's hottest properties.


“We are not a team of individuals,” midfielder Arda Turan tells FFT. “We are a collective group of hard working players who always want the best for the team. We battle for every ball during every minute of each match and you can see even in training matches that nobody wants to lose. We have a great team spirit, like a family.”

“Every match is a final for us,” enthuses the Turkish international. “We take every game as it comes and approach it with the mentality of a final and see what happens. This doesn’t mean that we don’t have big ambitions, I can assure you we do.”

Simeone’s spontaneous mentality, his treat-each-game-like-it’s-your-last outlook, is ubiquitous in the words of his players. “Cholo came with very clear ideas,” says Koke, a revelation in Spain and one of the country’s finest young players. “He came with the philosophy of taking it game-by-game. We believed in him and things are going well.”

“We train in different ways according to the next opponent,” Juanfran stated ahead of Atletico’s game against Austria Vienna. “But always as if it were a final.”

Juanfran, along with Koke and Diego Costa, are but three examples of another string to Simeone’s bow – the ability to significantly improve those with whom he works. El Cholo is squeezing the best out of his players.




“I have no doubt that we will see Cholo as one of the world’s top coaches for many years to come.”

- Arda Turan


Gabi, club captain and an Atleti fan who describes Simeone as his ‘hero’ for the joy the Argentinian brought as an Atleti player in the mid-90s and early 2000s, is another poster boy for the manager’s powers of player enhancement.

“Cholo is still in the early of his career as a manager but he is already one of the top coaches in Europe,” says Turan. “I have no doubt that we will see Cholo as one of the world’s top coaches for many years to come.”

Currently second in the table, one point behind Barcelona and five above rivals Real Madrid, can Atletico win the league or even the Champions League? The bookmakers are certainly starting to change their tune. Atleti were priced 66/1 to win La Liga and 80/1 to win the Champions League in pre-season, but such is their form, both odds have now been slashed dramatically - almost as if via the knife from between Simeone’s teeth.

There’s a definite sense ‘El Cholo’ is building something special at the Vicente Calderon.


Read more at http://www.fourfourtwo.com/features...n-moulding-club-his-image#ueHOXJv5hlohL4Es.99


Just what our club needs, a massive dose of fire and passion!!
 
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Gedson100

Well-Known Member
Feb 13, 2012
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This is the equivalent of telling your mates it's ok that your missus just dumped you because you're gonna ask out Kelly Brook.
 

Hoddle&Waddle

Well-Known Member
Nov 25, 2012
8,348
17,585
Obviously you could present an excellent case for him, but until he's actually linked.....
 

beats1

Well-Known Member
Feb 22, 2010
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29,616
He wanted to manage in england but no one wanted him last season. I dont think that will change tbh. I actually think he is gettable as their no clubs that will go for him this summer. The only team that may go for him is Chelsea imo.

Also remember Atletico will be asset stripped this summer, Costa will probably leave and Koke is off as well. Then the season after Torres may go Barca
 

Ghost Hardware

Well-Known Member
Aug 31, 2012
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63,433
I think he would be very near the top of many peoples ideal manager list... Ideal being operative word. No chance we would get him now and if AM continue to do as well as they are might well not won't to leave come summer. The only chance we may get him is if the likes of D Costa, Koke and Turan all leave which won't happen till summer. A very, very long shot at the moment.
 

beats1

Well-Known Member
Feb 22, 2010
30,031
29,616
I think he would be very near the top of many peoples ideal manager list... Ideal being operative word. No chance we would get him now and if AM continue to do as well as they are might well not won't to leave come summer. The only chance we may get him is if the likes of D Costa, Koke and Turan all leave which won't happen till summer. A very, very long shot at the moment.
Of course but we arent going to get FDB till the summer either, so as the other thread suggests it makes it seem we werent planing to sack or even sacked AVB
 

PrettyColors

Rosie47 Fan
Aug 13, 2011
3,866
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The case against Diego Simeone: first of all, does he speak English? Second of all, and much more importantly, why would he come here?

A theme I'm seeing is that the players and managers who seem to be good enough and fit our style and preferences come with a catch: they're at better clubs than us or are going to be.
 

Ghost Hardware

Well-Known Member
Aug 31, 2012
18,411
63,433
The case against Diego Simeone: first of all, does he speak English? Second of all, and much more importantly, why would he come here?

A theme I'm seeing is that the players and managers who seem to be good enough and fit our style and preferences come with a catch: they're at better clubs than us or are going to be.

We would be completely reliant on other teams buying up all AM's talent next summer. If that happened we could be in with a shot
 

only1waddle

Well-Known Member
Jun 18, 2012
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12,418
What shit? The usual shit that happens at virtually every club in football?

Have a quick think mate, he's at a CL club, doing well in La Liga, Atletico are playing well and we are in a mess, so yeah, the usual shit that happens at football clubs is not happening currently at the club he manages.
So with that evidence, he wouldn't want to get tangled up in our shit.
 

beats1

Well-Known Member
Feb 22, 2010
30,031
29,616
The case against Diego Simeone: first of all, does he speak English? Second of all, and much more importantly, why would he come here?

A theme I'm seeing is that the players and managers who seem to be good enough and fit our style and preferences come with a catch: they're at better clubs than us or are going to be.
HE wants to come to england and manage. He thought there would be clubs in for him

Secondly name one club that is better than us that would be going in for him?

Atletico are huge debt and are a selling club and are said to sold Spain's next big talent already to barca in a Neymar style deal
We would be completely reliant on other teams buying up all AM's talent next summer. If that happened we could be in with a shot
The thing is Koke will be sold and Turan isnt a starter atm, he knows a big offer for Costa comes and he is off.
 

SuperPav

Active Member
Nov 30, 2013
106
167
Mircea Lucescu is the way forward. Baldini a friend of his assistant at Shakhtar, and Lucescu himself is simply a genius.
 
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beats1

Well-Known Member
Feb 22, 2010
30,031
29,616
Have a quick think mate, he's at a CL club, doing well in La Liga, Atletico are playing well and we are in a mess, so yeah, the usual shit that happens at football clubs is not happening currently at the club he manages.
So with that evidence, he wouldn't want to get tangled up in our shit.
Atletico are in a shit situation but only at the end of every season when their players leave at the moment they are fine
 

only1waddle

Well-Known Member
Jun 18, 2012
8,212
12,418
Atletico are in a shit situation but only at the end of every season when their players leave at the moment they are fine

Yeah with the tax problem etc, currently they are doing well, and they seem to invest well and find decent players from nowhere, he won't leave his post this Jan, if he does then he will have lost it, and will be no use to man nor beast, our first tell tale sign will be a contract extension for Naughton..
 
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