Wednesday, December 5, 2007

Van Basten announces Dutch departure

Marco van Basten will stand down as coach of the Netherlands at the end of UEFA EURO 2008™.

'Big challenge'
Van Basten and his assistant John van't Schip, who is also leaving his role, revealed their decision during a meeting with the Royal Netherlands Football Association (KNVB) on Tuesday. "When [UEFA] EURO 2008™ ends, we will have been working with the Dutch national team for four years," said Van Basten in a statement on the KNVB website. "After the 2006 [FIFA] World Cup, we see this upcoming championship as a big challenge. After four years it will be time for a change of scene, however."

No plans
The 43-year-old, who replaced Dick Advocaat after UEFA EURO 2004™, has yet to make plans for life after the Netherlands, and is focusing instead on a successful tournament next summer in Austria and Switzerland. "Although John and myself really have no idea what the future holds for us, it was our duty to inform the KNVB, who have always been a good employer for us, on time," said Van Basten. "The KNVB now has enough time to search for a new coach. For us, it is not time to look back, though, because together with the players we are concentrating on next summer's tournament."

'A pity'
"I think it is a pity, but I appreciate that they have informed us on time," said KNVB director Henk Kesler. "We now have time to work towards finding a successor. Marco and John will fully focus on preparing the team for the tournament in the months ahead." Under Van Basten's tutelage, the Netherlands reached the last 16 of the World Cup in Germany, where they bowed out to Portugal. The Oranje finished in second place in qualifying Group G for UEFA EURO 2008™ behind Romania, whom they will also face in June alongside France and Italy following Sunday's draw.

©uefa.com

England fit in Switzerland friendly

England will play UEFA EURO 2008™ co-hosts Switzerland in a friendly on 6 February.

New year date
The Football Association has confirmed that the game will take place early next year at Wembley. The match could be the first in charge for a new England manager, provided the FA has appointed a replacement for Steve McClaren by then. England, who were pipped to a place at UEFA EURO 2008™ by Russia and Croatia, are also scheduled to face France in Paris on 26 March. The Switzerland fixture will be the 20th game between the two countries, with England winning 12, drawing four and losing three. Their most recent encounter was a 3-0 England victory at UEFA EURO 2004™.

©uefa.com

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Müller resigned to missing finals

Switzerland central defender Patrick Müller looks set to miss UEFA EURO 2008™ and the rest of the season with Olympique Lyonnais' with a serious knee injury.

Serious injury
The 30-year-old left the pitch 40 minutes into a reserve team game at the weekend with scans revealing a complete rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament in his right knee. A statement from the French champions said: "The player will undergo surgery by the end of the week. His will not be available again for six months."

'A 0.00001 per cent chance'
The 76-times capped international is resigned to missing UEFA EURO 2008™ in his home country, saying: "I have written off this competition. I'm out for six months - it starts in early June. I have a 0.00001 per cent chance of being ready. I'd so much have loved to be able to play in front of my home crowd." Switzerland will kick off UEFA EURO 2008™ against the Czech Republic in Basel on 7 June 2008. They will then face Turkey on 11 June and Portugal four days later, also at St. Jakob-Park.

Earlier injury
Müller played in only two competitive games this season before club medical staff detected a problem with his right knee, but the former FC Basel 1893, RCD Mallorca, Grasshopper-Club and Servette FC defender seemed to be on the road to recovery prior to the new setback. To add to his anxieties, his contract with Lyon is set to expire in June. Without him, the French side need a win against Rangers FC on Matchday 6 to progress to the UEFA Champions League Round of 16. If the Ligue 1 leaders fail, they will move on to the UEFA Cup Round of 32 in the new year.

©uefa.com

Klagenfurt launches EURO website

Austrian UEFA EURO 2008™ host city Klagenfurt has launched a new website to help welcome visitors from around the world to the state capital of Carinthia.

Multilingual site
The new site, www.klagenfurt.at/euro08, has something for everyone and features a wealth of useful information for visitors as well as local football fans. In addition, users can sign up for a newsletter containing all of the latest information about the host city. A special section of the site is dedicated to young supporters, with interactive features and a drawing contest. The home page is currently only available in English and German but the organisers are preparing to publish versions in Polish and Serbo-Croat in the coming days, with those Poland, Croatia and Germany all set to play in the three games in Klagenfurt at the finals.

©uefa.com

Kallen keen on co-operative countdown

Martin Kallen's countdown to UEFA EURO 2008™ has reached 186 days and continues tomorrow in Berne where he will make a progress report to the Swiss government – but that didn't stop Euro 2008 SA's chief operating officer fielding questions from euro2008.com users about the state of play for next summer's championship.

Free transport
Asked by david about free transport during the event, the COO confirmed: "Everyone who has a ticket will have free travel on matchdays and also until noon the following day throughout Austria and Switzerland. The full timetables are available in English via euro2008.com." For wiseking, meanwhile, the question concerned Kallen's priorities for the six months until the tournament starts. The answer: "To prepare the stadiums so they are ready. Good co-operation is being sought with the participating teams and also with the cities and the police. We want to work together to prepare the setting so people can expect emotions in Austria and Switzerland during June 2008."

Football festival
Kallen hopes fans will make the trip to the Alpine nations next summer even if their sides failed to qualify. Answering Boyd, who wanted to know what it meant for the competition not to have a British team involved, the COO stated: "It is a pity as we are missing a big part of Europe's football culture, but at the end sporting criteria decided the teams that would be involved. We still hope fans from the British Isles will support the event and come to Austria and Switzerland."

Sell-out
Supporters are, however, asked to come with tickets if they wish to attend the event as it is unlikely that tickets will go on sale once more. When Andy enquired about the next ticket sales phase, he received the following reply: "There will be no official sales any more. If tickets come back from the associations, they will go to the people already registered on the waiting list."

Co-operation essential
Looking back, the 2004 finals in Portugal drew interest from salvatore who asked about the differences between staging the tournament there compared to Austria and Switzerland. "We cannot compare Portugal to the event next year as Portugal is in the western part of Europe and Switzerland/Austria in the centre," Kallen said. "I can guarantee you that people of these countries will surprise you with their support of the event." The competition organisation has brought different challenges, and responding to pierre, the biggest difficulty identified has been the ability to deliver on promises made some years ago. "Our biggest concern has been to ensure the cities and venues were able to deal with the scope of the event in political terms," Kallen said. "It is important for everyone to have the right co-operation and have us all working in the right direction."

Professionalism
Key to the operation then has been the professionalism of the authorities involved in getting everything ready. The aspect of this which particularly interested Nick was safety and security at such a big tournament. Kallen said: "It's a big challenge and it needs entire attention from everyone in this matter. We are working closely with the two governments who have worked very hard to ensure this situation is treated with the utmost importance and with services to the highest standard." Indeed, joe even asked whether UEFA should reconsider holding major competitions like the EURO in smaller countries (in regard to stadium capacities etc). "UEFA has decided to host events in middle-sized countries such as Austria and Switzerland to promote the game in these nations," the COO countered. "For this reason, it will also happen in the future. I agree if you only look at the demand for tickets, then it should be in stadiums of greater capacity than we have. For security reasons, to have three larger stadiums, this gives you added flexibility in terms of managing the match schedule."

Busy times
The Euro 2008 SA chief also mentioned that Stade de Suisse is his favourite venue as the home ground of his team, BSC Young Boys, and that growing up as a player with FC Frutigen, his heroes were Johan Cruyff and Kevin Keegan. He also praised Lucerne for its efforts in hosting the final-round draw, stating that "people were emotionally taken by the spectacle". For Kallen, Germany will enter the championship as favourites although he hopes Switzerland will take the Henri Delaunay trophy in Vienna on 29 June. That being the case, it would end a busy month for the COO, who in reply to oberrittmeister's question, said: "I would imagine I will attend 15 matches or so. There are 19 days when matches take place in total, but I will get to all the venues, I hope."

©uefa.com

Austria-Germany friendly still on

Austria and Germany will go ahead with a planned friendly on 6 February despite having been drawn in the same group at UEFA EURO 2008™.

Show goes on
The co-hosts were joined by their neighbours in Group B after Sunday's tournament draw in Lucerne. However, both Austria coach Josef Hickersberger and his Germany counterpart Joachim Löw agree that there is no need to call off February's Vienna friendly.

'Not a problem'
Hickersberger said: "Joachim Löw and I quickly agreed that this match should still take place." The two sides will therefore meet twice within the space of four months – on 6 February and then again on 16 June in Group B. "Although there is a matter of months between February and our reunion at the [UEFA] European Championship, that's not a problem." Austria and Germany will also face Croatia and Poland at the EURO finals.

©uefa.com

Fine record can fuel France belief

Raymond Domenech may not be relishing a UEFA EURO 2008™ Group C rematch with 2006 FIFA World Cup conquerors Italy, but France actually boast an impressive record against the Azzurri. The Italians, in turn, seemingly have the Indian sign over the Netherlands, while Romanian victories against any of their three Group C rivals are rare. Here is a record of their past encounters.

Italy v France

  • The teams qualified together for the finals from Group B. Although Italy won the section, France had the better of the two meetings, winning 3-1 at home and drawing 0-0 away.
  • Italy won the World Cup final in Berlin last year after a shoot-out in which they converted all five of their penalties. The only player to miss from the spot was David Trezeguet, the man whose golden goal had defeated Italy in extra time in the UEFA EURO 2000™ showpiece.
  • The World Cup final will also be remembered for the red card received in extra time by Zinédine Zidane for his head butt on Italy defender Marco Materazzi. It was the last match of Zidane's career.
  • Penalty shoot-outs aside, Les Bleus have not lost a match to Italy – competitive or friendly – since the 1978 World Cup, a run which includes a quarter-final in 1998.

    Netherlands v France
  • The Netherlands were defeated on penalties by France at EURO '96™, the second of three successive shoot-out failures in the UEFA European Championship.
  • The Dutch defeated France 3-2 on home soil four years later but both teams had already booked their places in the quarter-finals.
  • UEFA President Michel Platini was on target when France defeated the Netherlands 2-0 at the Parc des Princes to qualify for the 1982 World Cup. Didier Six scored the other.
  • The two teams last met on 31 March 2004 in Rotterdam. The friendly finished goalless.

    Netherlands v Italy

  • Italy defeated the Netherlands on penalties in the UEFA EURO 2000™ semi-finals. The Dutch became the fourth successive EURO host nation to exit in the last four.
  • The meeting in Amsterdam was the first between the two countries in a major tournament since the 1978 World Cup. The Oranje won that encounter in Buenos Aires to reach the final thanks to long-range goals from Ernie Brandts and Arie Haan. Brandts had earlier scored an own goal to give Italy the lead. The Netherlands have not beaten Italy in eight matches since.
  • The two coaches, Marco van Basten and Roberto Donadoni, played together for several years at AC Milan.

    Netherlands v Romania
  • The nations qualified for 2008 in tandem from the same group. The Romanians finished top, having claimed the first win in their history over the Dutch in October. Dorin Goian scored the only goal in a 1-0 victory in rainswept Constanta. The earlier encounter, in Rotterdam, ended goalless.
  • Conversely, the Netherlands did the double over Romania en route to qualifying for the 2006 World Cup.
  • Romania failed to score in the first five fixtures between the two countries and have managed just two in total in ten games.

    Italy v Romania
  • Italy have won the last four meetings, a sequence beginning with a 2-0 victory in Brussels in the UEFA EURO 2000™ quarter-finals. Francesco Totti and Filippo Inzaghi scored the goals while Romanian legend Gheorghe Hagi was sent off on his 125th and last appearance for his country.
  • Inzaghi also scored in each of Italy's two wins in the 2002 World Cup qualifying competition.

    France v Romania
  • EURO '96™ brought France and Romania into competitive combat for the first and only time – they met both in qualifying and at the finals, where a Christophe Dugarry goal won the group game in Newcastle and gave Les Bleus a tenth successive victory under coach Aimé Jacquet.
  • Just one friendly has been played since them, France winning 2-1 in Paris on 13 February 2002 with goals from Patrick Vieira and Emmanuel Petit.
  • The teams have been drawn against each other in the qualifying round for the 2010 World Cup.
  • ©uefa.com