The team of stars travelling to Brazil as fifth favourites are the result of a coaching revolution that started in 1998
Belgian
clubs are worried by the growing trend of England's elite swooping for
their top young talent. Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian
Not everything that Michel Sablon writes down goes to plan. At
Italia 90, Sablon was part of Belgium’s coaching staff, and a couple of
minutes before the end of extra time in their last-16 match against
England, he compiled a list of the penalty-takers. He had just finished
scribbling the names when David Platt, in one of those iconic World Cup
moments, spectacularly hooked the ball past Michel Preud’homme. “A great goal by Platt. But I was so disappointed,” Sablon says. “I threw the list away.”
A
little more than a decade later Sablon started with another blank piece
of paper, this time with the intention of revolutionising Belgian
football in his role as the federation’s new technical director. At its
headquarters in Brussels, Sablon proudly hands over a copy of the
original blueprint, dated September 2006 and titled “La vision de
formation de l’URBSFA”. He smiles when asked whether going to this
summer’s World Cup finals as fifth favourites was what he had in mind.
“For sure, no”.
Belgium’s emergence as one of the strongest
nations in world football has exceeded all expectations. A country with a
population of only 11m, with just 34 professional clubs competing
across two leagues, has produced – and there are no reservations in
Belgium about using this term because it is widely accepted as the only
description befitting of their talent pool – a golden generation of footballers.
Marc
Wilmots’ 23-man squad for the World Cup is replete with stellar names,
players who have changed hands for hundreds of millions of pounds and in
the majority of cases belong to Premier League clubs. It is also a
group that could stay together for years to come – all but six are aged
27 and under. Daniel van Buyten, the Bayern Munich defender, is the only
player in his 30s. “It’s excellent,” Sablon says. “But when those guys
come together in one group, I think it’s a little bit lucky also.”
Eden Hazard is arguably the most talented of
the current roster that also includes Romelu Lukakua and Vincent
Kompany. Photograph: Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty
For the federation, the watershed moment came in 1998 when Belgium
were eliminated at the group stage at the World Cup finals in France.
Bob Browaeys, who has coached Belgium youth teams at every level and
played a major part in putting together Sablon’s blueprint, says there
was “no unified vision on youth” at that point. He remembers 30
federation coaches, drawn from the Dutch- and French-speaking parts of
the country, meeting to discuss a radical change in approach.
“You
have to know that at the end of the 90s in Belgium, they all played
with individual marking, sometimes with a sweeper, it was 4-4-2, it was
even 3-5-2, we got a lot of results with our A team, because we played
very organised. But it was defensive, a culture of counter-attack,”
Browaeys says.
Tapping into philosophies and training methods in
the national setups in Netherlands and France, their neighbours in the
north and south, as well as at clubs such as Ajax and Barcelona,
Browaeys and his colleagues proposed that every Belgium youth team would
play 4-3-3 and that work should begin on producing a totally different
type of player.
“It was a massive shift but we believed that
4-3-3, at that moment, was the strongest learning environment for our
players,” Browaeys says. “We felt that we had to develop dribbling
skills, we said at the heart of our vision was 1v1, the duel. We said
when a boy or girl wants to start playing football, you must offer first
the dribble, let them play freely.”
By the time Sablon took over
as acting technical director in 2001, there was a playing philosophy but
little in the way of structure. Sablon provided that and more. His
arrival was also well-timed. Belgium had just co-hosted Euro 2000 with
the Netherlands and, although they played poorly and failed to get out
of their group, they made a tidy profit off the field.
Sablon made
sure a chunk of that money was invested in youth development. A new
national football centre was built in Tubize, on the outskirts of
Brussels. The number of people enrolling on the entry-level coaching
course increased tenfold after the federation made it free. Double PASS,
a subsidiary of the University of Brussels, were appointed to audit all
the youth systems at club level and make recommendations (the Premier
League started using the same company nine years later).
Around
the same time Sablon commissioned the University of Louvain to carry out
an extensive study on youth football in Belgium, which involved filming
1,500 matches across different age groups. He had worked closely with
the clubs for some time, holding regular meetings with academy directors
to exchange ideas and encourage them to contribute towards the changing
face of Belgian football, but not everyone was convinced.
The
university’s results, Sablon says, were a turning point. “That’s why we
started with scientific analysis. If we showed the clubs the figures of
young boys and girls playing at under-eight and under-nine, and they
touched the ball twice in half an hour, no one can say that it’s good.
We had the proof. We had the figures. And this was people who were known
in football. The guy who made the analysis, Werner Helsen, was a player
and a coach in the second division, so he’s a professor in university
but also a real football man.”
Michel Sablon was on Belgium's coaching
staff at Italia '90 and became the federation's technical director in
2001. Photo: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian
One of the findings in the university research was that there was
far too much emphasis on winning and not enough on development. There
was also evidence to support the federation’s theory that 2v2, 5v5 and
8v8 were the best small-sided games to encourage children to practise
the skills – dribbling and diagonal passing – that were central to their
philosophy of playing 4-3-3.
Determined to get the message
through at all levels of the game, Sablon delivered more than 100
presentations. “I gave an explanation with videos and everything. And
then I went to the pitch with the coaches who were preparing the boys.
It was about four hours in total,” he says.
“On one occasion I
said to a president: ‘I don’t start [this presentation].’ He said:
‘What’s happened?’ I said: ‘I asked the clubs not to put up the rankings
for the small boys, from under-7 and under-8.’ Can you imagine what it
was like with 300 people in the hall waiting? They moved the rankings
with hammers and nails. I said to them afterwards: ‘Rankings is the
wrong way. Make the development of your players the first objective.’”
There
were also problems to contend with inside the federation when results
suffered. “I was responsible for all national teams and we played 4-3-3
from one season to another,” Sablon says. “We lost games, people said:
‘Why did we change it?’ I was once a member of the executive committee,
it was an advantage – I could convince people at the top of the
federation. Some would shoot me of course, they said: ‘You are crazy.’
They said: ‘We play European Championship and you pay more attention to
the playing system than to be qualified.’
I said: ‘Yes, you are completely right.’”
Although
Eden Hazard, Thomas Vermaelen and Jan Vertonghen left Belgium as
teenagers to continue their football education abroad, crucially the
federation was able to have a direct influence on the development of the
majority of the country’s elite players.
A joint initiative with
the government saw eight Topsport schools introduced between 1998 and
2002, with the aim of providing the most talented boys and girls, aged
between 14 and 18, with additional training during the normal curriculum
to increase their chances of reaching the top. Those sessions – four
mornings a week and two hours at a time – continue to be taken by
coaches that work for the federation.
The premise behind it is not
dissimilar to the Football Association’s former national school at
Lilleshall, which closed in 1999 because of the introduction of Premier
League academies, except the Belgian system has a couple of major
advantages. With eight Topsport schools dotted around a small country,
the players selected are able to commute from home, the corollary being
that they are free to train with their clubs four times a week in the
evening.
All of which meant that the selected players were
receiving twice as much coaching as they did before. As for the success
rate, seven of the World Cup squad – Thibaut Courtois, Dries Mertens,
Kevin de Bruyne, Mousa Dembélé, Steven Defour, Axel Witsel and Nacer
Chadli – came through a system that many of Belgium’s leading clubs have
now replicated by collaborating with local schools to increase contact
time with their own players.
Jean Kindermans provides a
tour of one of the two schools in Brussels that Anderlecht use as part
of their “Purple Talents” project, which was launched in 2007 and counts
Romelu Lukaku among its graduates. Kindermans, Anderlecht’s director of
youth, says that the three-times-a-week one-hour training sessions at
school, which are exclusively based on the development of technical
skills, have made a huge difference.
Romelu Lukaku came through the Purple
Talents project, before signing professional terms at Anderlecht in
2009. Photo: Bruno Fahy-John Thys/Press Association
“My ambition was to have more hours to develop young boys,” he says.
“Lukaku, you have to know, we took him when he was under-13. He was a
good player but not very good technically. He was fast and strong but we
had to polish him.”
Education, though, is not allowed to suffer.
At the start of the morning session Kindermans welcomes back a group of
academy players who were prevented from training at school for a period
because their grades dropped off. He explains how he believes Anderlecht
have a duty of care that stretches beyond trying to produce another
Vincent Kompany or Lukaku.
“In Anderlecht, every day 220 young
guys, from under-six to under-21, are dreaming about a future
professional career. Explain to me how many from the 220 are going to
reach professional level? Maximum 10%. When you are not a good educator,
you say the 200 guys that will not reach a professional level is not my
problem. I say: ‘Yes, it is my problem.’ We have to tell them that if
they don’t reach professional level, because of injury, confidence, bad
development, a family situation, if you stay in Anderlecht as long as
possible, you will have a degree at school that will give you the
opportunity to find a job, to be a human being with intellectual
skills.”
While Kindermans praises the work that has gone on within
the national setup – he describes Sablon as a “brilliant visionary” –
he believes “there is no unique factor that is influencing the good
period of the Belgian team”. He is also quick to stress – and these
views are later repeated at Genk – that Anderlecht “don’t blindly follow
what the federation is asking us”.
By way of example, Kindermans
points out that Anderlecht play 3-4-3, rather than the federation’s
favoured 4-3-3, up until the age of 14. He offers an interesting
explanation for that decision. “Every time we play a match we try to
have 70% of possession. So it means if you are going to play with four
defenders, you are going to put them at an early age in a comfortable
situation. We are playing with three defenders at a lower age to put
them in difficulty.”
His commitment to developing footballers, in
the purest sense, is absolute. “You have to know that tackling is
forbidden in Anderlecht. You can only anticipate or intercept, till they
come to Under-21 team, in the second team of Anderlecht,” Kindermans
says. “Our main motivation is we want to create technically skilled
football players. If our centre-backs try to provide a solution by
tackling and putting the ball out, I don’t like it. I want to educate as
good as possible: ‘When do I have to anticipate? When do I have to drop
off?’ I want to create intelligent players, not butchers.”
He
also wants to be able to keep hold of those intelligent players for
longer – something that has become increasingly difficult over the last
few years, when Belgium’s rise to prominence has coincided with foreign
clubs, in particular those from the Premier League, trying to sign the
next generation of stars earlier and earlier. The worry is not just for
the club that loses the player but what the long-term implications are
for the national team if a promising talent is denied the chance to play
first-team football at a young age.
“Our philosophy in Anderlecht
is to be a trampoline for Europe. We only ask one thing: let us
educate,” Kindermans says. “Let us have one, two, three years of
sportive reward before leaving. Not leaving at 14 or 15 years old,
because I think you [the player] take a big risk and we are
disappointed.
“We lost a player [Ismail Azzaoui] recently. We
proposed him a contract for three years at the age of 16. I felt he was
waiting. And in March I received a message from his father, thanking us
for the good job we did with him for the last four or five seasons,
telling us he’s leaving the club immediately for a foreign club. Now we
know that it is Tottenham. So I have difficulties with that.
“Today
the difficulty for young Belgian players is to resist ... when I see
[Adnan] Januzaj has left, [Charly] Musonda has left to join Chelsea,
Mathias Bossaerts has left to Manchester City, Azzaoui left to
Tottenham, I am afraid that if every year Anderlecht is losing one, two
or three players of our youth education, we are going to work hard but
not get the rewards.
“The compensation is small. For Januzaj it
was €550,000. It’s Uefa rules. And Manchester United were quite polite,
because they gave more than they had to give, because it was an amazing
talent. I remember that people from the [Anderlecht] board said: ‘Oh,
nice job for a 16-year-old boy.’ I said: ‘Today, this may be good, we
are proud that we can take €550,000. But what if within two, three or
four years he will play in the Manchester United first team?’ And today
maybe you can ask for 50 times more.”
At Genk, Roland Breugelmans,
who has worked for the club for 25 years and been in charge of the
youth setup for the majority of that time, echoes Kindermans’
sentiments. An entire corridor on the ground floor of Genk’s academy
building is decorated with pictures of players who have come through
their youth system, including three of the World Cup squad – Defour, De
Bruyne and Courtois – yet so many are gone in the blink of an eye. Siebe
Schrijvers, a talented 17-year-old forward, could be the next off the
production line.Breugelmans is frustrated but also realistic.
“When
a young player has an offer from England, we cannot win. We try to say
to our players, stay until the end of school in Belgium, when you are
18, and after you have your diploma you can go to other countries when
you have a lot of qualities. But we also have young players going to
England at 16 years old, when the parents think: ‘Oh, it’s a lot of
money.’ And it is a lot of money, €100,000 for one year. We give €10,000
for one year.”
In terms of the broader picture, Breugelmans
maintains that the contribution that certain clubs have made to the
health of Belgian football should not be overlooked. “I don’t like the
federation saying: ‘With the system of our sport schools, that is the
basis of the success now of our national team,’” he says. “I think
everybody tried to give something to the player, the club and the
federation.”
In Droixhe, a desperately poor neighbourhood on the
northern fringes of Liège, another side to the story behind Belgium’s
footballing renaissance is told – one that just about everyone in the
country agrees has had a major impact on the fortunes of the national
team.
First impressions are bleak when the No17 bus reaches the
end of its journey from the centre of Liège. Ugly high-rise flats circle
the area, rubbish litters the streets and a pushchair is half-submerged
in a pond. One of the tower blocks is empty after being declared
unsafe. Another two have been demolished, leaving a pile of rubble and
an area of wasteland where a group of young boys are showing off their
ball-juggling skills.
Droixhe is an area largely home to
immigrants, chronically lacking in investment, high in crime and low in
prospects – apart from when it comes to football. The gravel court where
four teenagers are tearing around in the sunshine is the same makeshift
pitch that Christian Benteke, Witsel and Zakaria Bakkali played on when
they were growing up in Liège. All three have gone on to play for
Belgium. All three also have multicultural roots, which is the case with
so many of the players whoWilmots has taken to Brazil. They are
inspirational figures to the children playing football in the streets
and help to unite what can often feel like a fragmented country.
This makeshift gravel court in Droixhe was
once home to Christian Benteke and Axel Witsel. Photograph: Graeme
Robertson for the Guardian
“It’s not easy for the kids here,” says Kismet Eris, a former
community worker in Droixhe, who runs his own football academy in Liège
and also represents Benteke. “They don’t have the same chances as the
other ones, and that’s why they’re so proud of the national team,
because now they are also accepted as Belgian people, because they see
some of their own playing for the national team. A few years ago it was
not like that. Now it is more open. With the national youth teams, you
can see that you’ve got a lot of children of immigrants, or former
refugees, representing Belgium. It’s also the country – the country is
people like Christian, [Marouane] Fellaini, Axel Witsel, [Jan]
Vertonghen, who is Flemish, Courtois, a Walloon. That’s the typical
image of Belgium.”
Belgium, as those involved in football in the
country are quick to point out, have achieved nothing yet other than
qualify for their first major tournament in 12 years and restore some
pride. Their progress, though, is indisputable and, furthermore,
everything seems to be in place to ensure they keep getting better.
Brazil may just be the start.
“It’s going to be the first time
this team is going to play in that type of environment,” says Steven
Martens, the secretary general at the Belgium FA. “Can they do that?
Absolutely they can. Will they do that? It’s very hard to say. Will they
do something remarkable over the next two, three World Cups and
European Championships? I am absolutely convinced.”
Credit: The Guardian - www.theguardian.com
Stuart James
Stuart James is a football writer who covers the midlands region for the Guardian.He is a former professional footballer
Caribbean Insight is published by CHARIZO PUBLISHING, part of the CHARIZO CONSULTING GROUP.
I am grateful to all those who, so far, have contributed ideas, criticisms, suggestions. and for all that have become de rigueur for a venture of such confined rubric, but the restricted journey was necessary for us to arrive at this broad place.
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