Another cagey game with Barca will provoke
criticism, but Chelsea's manager has already shown Europe that his tactics
can conquer all.
By Sam Wallace
Chelsea manager Guus Hiddink speaks to the
press ahead of their UEFA Champions League Semi-Final Second Leg
match against Barcelona at Stamford Bridge / Photo:
AP
When he was the PSV Eindhoven coach in the summer of 1987,
Guus Hiddink's club sold Ruud Gullit to Milan for a record 17m Dutch guilders
(then ?6m), his team were hopeless in pre-season and by the time they
started the season proper there were doubts they would defend their league
title.
The following May they were European champions. In 1988, as he must tonight
with Chelsea, Hiddink had to defeat the competition's favourites on his
way to winning the European Cup. He eliminated the Real Madrid team of
Emilio Butragueno and Hugo Sanchez in the semi-finals. The previous round
he did the same against Jean Tigana's Bordeaux. In those two rounds, PSV
drew all four matches and progressed both times on away goals.
In the final against Benfica, Hiddink's team - again the underdogs - won
on penalties. The Dutch players in his team - Ronald Koeman, Wim Kieft
and Hans van Breukelen - went on to be the muscle in the Marco van Basten
and Gullit-inspired Netherlands team that won the European Championships
that summer. They were grafters, banded together by a strong team spirit
and along with their Belgian captain Eric Gerets and Danes Soren Lerby
and Jan Heintze they ground out results for Hiddink.
Sound familiar? When the Chelsea coach said at the weekend that he has
often woken at night to sketch out ideas for tonight's second leg against
Barcelona you can bet that he was not drawing up a blueprint for free-flowing
football. It is not the prospect of unleashing a team on all-out attack
that gives a manager sleepless nights; it is the question of how he stops
Barcelona that causes the fitful rest.
Hiddink (right) has no moral obligation to beat Barcelona at their own
game. He just has an obligation to beat them. Hiddink was given the mother
of all hospital passes by Roman Abramovich in February when he was installed
as interim coach and he has responded by recognising what is best about
Chelsea's players and restoring it. Josep Guardiola's team have no divine
right to win tonight, just because they have scored 142 goals this season
or beaten Real Madrid 6-2 away and if they blow it against Chelsea they
will have no one but themselves to blame.
If Chelsea set out to stop Barcelona playing then, whatever the result,
Hiddink can expect criticism for his style of play. This is plainly nonsense.
There is no manager from Sir Alex Ferguson to the Blue Square Premier
who will not have mapped out in his own mind how he would take on Barcelona
with a team of Chelsea's capabilities. It is the ultimate test for a football
man: a young pup in the other dugout and a battalion of attacking opponents.
The beauty and fascination of tonight's game is not just in how Lionel
Messi and Xavi Hernandez play, but how Hiddink counters them.
So how does he beat Barcelona? The clues suggest that Hiddink will do
exactly what he did in the Nou Camp all over again. He will set up his
team to frustrate and spoil Barcelona's tactics and break up their usual
rhythms. A goal at Stamford Bridge for Barcelona means that Chelsea have
to score two to go through, which in turn will mean the home side have
to open up even more. Chelsea's best chance of winning is keeping a clean
sheet and hoping to score on the counter-attack.
Hiddink cannot prevail on away goals this time but he does have the option
of an exceptional striker in Didier Drogba who might just steal him a
goal. He is expected to bring in Nicolas Anelka, in place of John Obi
Mikel, on the right side of a five-man midfield to counter Barcelona along
that flank. Florent Malouda demonstrated at the Nou Camp how a good winger
can keep an attacking full-back, Daniel Alves, in check. It is a compromise
that allows Hiddink to get another attacking player on the pitch, albeit
in a defensive role.
The history of the game is full of exciting, attacking teams who happened
to be beaten by sides that were better-organised and more obdurate on
the day. Xavi and Guardiola have been very cutting indeed about the style
of football that Chelsea played last week, to the extent that if they
are eliminated tonight a second protest in the space of eight days will
ring very hollow. Great sides and great players may complain once about
being mugged by inferior teams but do it twice and it begins to sound
a little hollow.
If there is a template of sorts for this kind of victory, Hiddink could
look at a more recent PSV victory, over Arsenal in the Champions League
first knockout round two years ago. Despite Arsenal's greater attacking
potency and virtual dominance of both games, PSV won 1-0 at home and drew
1-1 at the Emirates with a late equaliser from Alex da Costa, who plays
in a Chelsea shirt tonight. Arsene Wenger complained about manager Ronald
Koeman's tactics but his side were left with a superior possession count
and nothing else.
Koeman had evidently remembered a thing or two about PSV's 1988 run to
the European Cup final and his former coach's clever habit of nicking
results. Hiddink's victorious PSV team in the 1987-88 season were not
all that bad anyway: on their way to winning the domestic title in the
Netherlands they scored 117 goals. That suggested they were a perfectly
good team who had a coach savvy enough to recognise when they could be
let off the leash and when they had to accept they were up against a more
dangerous attacking force and had to adjust accordingly. No shame in that.
Golden Guus: Hiddink's magic touch
*PSV win European Cup Took charge prior to the 1987-88 season before leading
them to a treble, including a European Cup, won by beating Benfica on
penalties in Stuttgart after a 0-0 draw.
*SOUTH KOREA WORLD CUP SEMI-FINALISTS
Steered co-hosts South Korea to fourth at the 2002 World Cup . Knocked
out Italy and Spain before succumbing to Germany in last four.
*GUIDES SOCCEROOS TO 2006 WORLD CUP
Led unfancied Australia to their first World Cup finals in 32 years. The
Socceroos progressed to the second round, where they lost to a debatable
injury-time Italy penalty.
*TAKES RUSSIA TO EURO CHAMPIONSHIPS
Managed Russia as they defeated England to reach Euro '08. Inspired by
Andrei Arshavin, Russia overcome the highly-rated Netherlands before losing
to Spain in the last four.