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Sports

Blog: On the Azkals controversy

Rick Olivares - The Philippine Star

I had known about Stephan Schrock’s feelings about his disenchantment following the loss in the last AFC Challenge Cup finals from several players after they returned home. Schrock wasn’t the only one. There were several. They questioned who was benched, who was given playing time, and so on and so forth.

Players questioning their coach’s decisions and vice versa have been a part of sports forever. And so have spats. This isn’t the first nor will it be the last.

What I am really surprised about is if people are quibbling about playing time and decisions, why didn’t they come out in the open during the previous coach’s tenure? I’d say there was plenty to gripe about and I do know firsthand knowledge about their gripes and some of them are even bigger than any of the current issues being bandied about.

Why? Was it because the previous coach at the expense of others favored them as well? I wouldn’t know. But I do know that at least one player was ready to publicly say that he was no longer going to play for that coach but we all prevailed upon him to keep his emotions in check.

Guess that was one sound play, right?

Was I surprised that it turned out this way – with shots fired in social media and the press?

Yes. Most definitely. And it is wrong.

This should have been handled internally. And with the players firing shots in social media and now the press, it has reached a point of no return.

And it cannot be allowed to fester as rightly or wrongly, it will affect the team. And so, they are cut.

I thought of some famous football snubs and here are some of them.

Let’s start off with the most recent.

Landon Donovan was left off the USMNT’s roster to the Brazil World Cup. To Donovan’s credit, he never publicly criticized the coach after he was left out. He merely expressed disappointment and that was it. Personally, I thought that he had done enough to be on the team but a sabbatical during the qualifiers probably didn’t help at all.

And there’s David Beckham, who was cut not once but twice from England but also Real Madrid. And on one occasion, from both in one calendar year! Talk about bad luck. Can you believe that?

In 2006, Beckham’s last year with Real Madrid, he fell out of favor (like he did with Alex Ferguson at Manchester United) with Fabio Capello and soon found himself riding the bench. When it was floated about that the Englishman was headed for the MLS midway through La Liga, Capello publicly said that Beckham’s days with the Spanish club were over.

At the same time, Steve McClaren cut him from England. Yet Beckham never ever said anything. He quietly worked his way back into the rotation and became an integral part of Madrid’s run to the La Liga title of 2006-07.

And he also found his way back to England as well.

Ronaldinho was supposed to star for Brazil in South Africa. Nike even included him in all their pre-World Cup guerilla adverts, only for Dunga to infamously leave him off the team. Did he even take shots at Dunga? No.

Essentially, it boils down to one issue – people are quibbling about playing time.

And that I find absurd.

No one should ever ask for that.

It’s like many of those high school basketball stars who ask recruiters from colleges about getting minutes as a frosh. Really? Wow.

It’s like asking to fly in from Europe on a business class seat.

It’s like asking for some money before he can play for the national team.

Wait a minute.

Playing for the national team is voluntary. And furthermore, it is an honor.

I can understand getting some money from the marketing efforts (and it is perhaps only fair) but asking for some? That’s low.

Sometimes, I wonder if we have football players or divas.

I recall Coach Norman Fegidero telling me about some past Azkals (so you know this was of recent vintage) asking (either of the following): a) to leave camp because he has something to do in Manila; and b) if he can receive status like the Fil-foreigners who fly in to Manila before a tournament since technically he was born abroad too but has since made the Philippines his home.

Come on. Let’s show some professionalism here and start lifting the level of football not only on the pitch but off the pitch. We hear of coaches leaving their clubs because players would opt out of practice for a trip out of town with the girlfriend or hightail it off to watch a Pacquiao fight.

And let it be known that there’s this current UFL club that is in search of a coach. And this coach is known to be a stickler for discipline and would brook no shenanigans of any sort. The players – or at least their core – thought that, “Nah, let’s get some other guy.”

What in the name of Sam Hill is going on?

It’s absurd really.

And am I too old school to say that playing time is never demanded but earned and that playing time is never guaranteed because of reputation or what was done in the past?

Let’s make this clear.

I believe that Schrock is one of the finest players called up to the national squad. Ever. The quality was evident from the beginning. In my opinion, he is an impact player and one I totally enjoy watching. He is a game changer.

Dennis Cagara? Always thought he was solid on defense and having him there was like that old banking tagline, “Para kang naka sandal sa pader.” In short, reliable.

Neil Etheridge? Man. I don’t have too many jerseys of the Azkals or local players but I do have an Etheridge Fulham. That tells you how I feel about the dude who has become a favorite of mine since his debut in Iloilo in 2008. At that time, he came in replaced Louie Casas who was the number one keeper for the country.

That debut of Neil was incredible. He was full of confidence. He directed the defense. Solid.

And I said then, now we need to fix the backline. Rob Gier soon came up. Ray Jonsson. And I felt that along with Aly Borromeo and Anton del Rosario, whoo wee. Yes, sir.

Then I said, “Now we get to fix the middle.” Lo and behold, we had the Chief, JYH, and Chris G up there.

Ian Araneta was starting to play very well and I thought would make an excellent strike partner up front with Phil YH.

Then Jason De Jong came up.

I then said, “We’re building quite a team here.”

And then Vietnam in 2010 happened.

But no one stays at that level for too long. Players get injured. The form goes down because of many factors.

Other players get better and soon take the place of the others. It’s normal and but natural.

Soon the Guirado brothers came up. Ditto with Cagara and Jerry Lucena. And soon even more.

Then the mainstays of 2009-10 began to sit. Neil. Anton. Jason. Chief. Chris.

After a while, personally, I thought that Roland Muller was getting better and it seemed inevitable that he was going to be the starter. Furthermore, it was imperative that Patrick Deyto needed to get on the national team because he was an outstanding keeper. Privately, I was rooting for Neil to show them that he deserved to keep his spot.

But I do not see everything. The coaching staff and management theoretically do. And whether I agree or disagree with their decisions to start with this eleven, with their substitutes their formation or tactics, what they put on the field I will support. If I disagree, depending on the severity of it, I will write about in a manner I believe right. If they are right, then I will point that out too. 

Now as for the local talent pool – with many of the overseas players now beginning to play locally – it has expanded. And if you ask me, the talent base has greatly improved. The locals began to get better because of the quality of the training and the competition as well as the exposure and support.

It’s like looking at the PBA.

In the 1990s, we saw a swell of Fil-Ams invade the league that at one point, they threatened the livelihood of the homegrown talents.

But it evened out.

Look at our current national team that played in the last FIBA Asia and will play in a few weeks in Spain? How many are Fil-Ams?

The local pool got better and they learned from the best.

It’s the same with football. Only some people have done a poor job of reading the signs.

Philippine Football Federation technical director and former Azkals head coach Aris Caslib along with the folks at the PFF leading up to the current team management have always had a plan to bring up players every other tournament or year. That is normal for every team in this world; national team or club.

It is cyclical. Players move up and after a while moved out.

I recall after one tournament around 2007, I hung out with Casas and national team defender Japeth Sablon after watching a UFL match played at Ateneo. They told me then that they felt the winds of change were blowing. They were unhappy about losing their spots to those based overseas. But they seemed helpless in the face of the tide.

Soon enough, they were gone. They made no bones about their displeasure. They never told me that it was off the record. But I never wrote about it because I understood the changes. I didn’t agree with it but I never spoke against it.

That’s because it was that changing of the guard. It happens sometimes sooner than you expect it. And maybe that is what is happening now.

I feel bad because these players chose this path to vent their thoughts or feelings of frustration because that simply means it is unacceptable. You cannot ask any boss in this world to explain his actions. You’d find yourself out of the door and looking for another job if you’d do that.

I recall this sign in one of the first ad agencies I worked for: Rule Number One: The boss is always right. Rule Number Two: In case the boss is wrong, refer to Rule Number One.”

Does that apply to the national team? Yes.

When Anton Del Rosario was cut from the national team, it was for his voicing out his displeasure over certain things. He paid for it and was recently reinstated. And man, was I happy to see the old boy back because he has always been one of my favorite players.

As painful as it is to accept, it must be stated clearly that no one is above the team. There are codes of conduct and rules.

Imagine if this was allowed to go on -- Thomas Dooley and whoever follows will be a lame duck coach.

I told Phil Younghusband yesterday (who asked my opinion in this matter) that I see him coaching the national side in the near future. And at some point he will be faced with the same decisions that Aris Caslib, Nonoy Carpio, Nonoy Fegidero, Juan Cutillas, Des Bulpin, Simon McMenemy, Michael Weiss and Dooley (I only named the coaches who I followed and covered) face each and every time out. Who do you play? Who do you pull out and bring on? Who do you call up? And so on and so forth.

The sad thing is maybe if Schrock and company didn’t go public with this then it would have been resolved.

After all, Beckham, once sent packing by Ferguson, twice by the national team, found a way to come back. He wasn’t brought back for his charm or his marketability. He showed that he belonged because he did his talking on the pitch.

vuukle comment

ARIS CASLIB

AZKALS

BECKHAM

BUT I

COACH

LA LIGA

NATIONAL

ONE

PLAYERS

TEAM

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