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Tuesday, October 28, 2014

World Cup winner Zidane gets three-month coaching ban



World Cup winner Zinedine Zidane has been suspended from coaching for three months for taking charge of a team without the right qualifications.
The Spanish Football Federation has banned the former France midfielder for leading Real Madrid Castilla, the European champions' reserve side.
Zidane's assistant Santiago Sanchez has also received a three-month ban.
Real issued a statement declaring their "absolute disagreement" with the decision, which they intend to fight.
The club said Zidane "has been authorised by the French Football Federation to work as a head coach in the category Real Madrid Castilla currently find themselves in".
Real's statement concluded: "Real Madrid will pursue every available legal avenue so that this decision is overturned."
Zidane was appointed reserve-team coach in the summer after working as assistant to Carlo Ancelotti last season, which ended with Real winning the Champions League.
The former France midfielder spent five seasons with Real as a player after joining from Juventus in 2001 for £45.8m, then a world-record fee.
He scored the winner as Real beat Bayer Leverkusen to win the Champions League in 2002, and was named World Footballer of the Year for a third time in 2003, having received the award in 1998 and 2000.
His playing career ended in controversy when he was sent off in the 2006 World Cup final - his last match before retiring - for headbutting Italy defender Marco Materazzi in the chest.
Zidane worked as an adviser to Real president Florentino Perez before he was appointed the club's sporting director in 2011.
Checkout his achievements below as a player

Achievements of Zinedine Zidane:
  1. He made his professional debut at the age of 16 with Cannes on 18 May 1989 against Nantes in a French Division match. Incidentally, he scored his first goal against the same team in a 2-1 triumph for Cannes on February 8, 1991 and was rewarded with a car from the club.
  2. In this season, Cannes qualified for the European stage for the first time through the UEFA Cup, finishing fourth in the league. It still remains as the club’s highest finish in the top flight of the division. Such is Zizou’s influence.
  3. He was bestowed the Ligue 1 Young Player of the Year award in 1994.
  4. In Bordeaux, he played in some midlfield combinations with Bixente Lizarazu and Christophe Duggary which would then shape up to be the cornerstone of the midfield of the French national team.
  5. In 1994, he made his debut for France against Czech Republic. The Czechs were leading 2-0 when national manager Aimes Jacquet thought of giving Zidane his debut on his homeground. Zidane repayed the faith of his manager by scoring two goals and avoiding an embarassing defeat for France. A legend was emerging.
  6. In 1995, Zidane replaced the legendary Eric Cantona in the playmaker position in the French national team and helped France to the semifinals of Euro 96.
  7. In the beginning of the 1996 season, Zidane was offered to Newcastle United but the club rejected the player as it thought he was not good enough to play in the English Division. Ironically, he won the Ligue 1 Player of the Year award in the same year. An exquisite way to silence your critics.
  8. Zidane’s influence continued to Italy where he won the 1996-97 and 1997-98 Serie A titles and also the 1996 Intercontinental Cup with Juventus. 
  9. As a result, he was awarded the Seria A Foreign Player of the Year award in 1997 and 2001.
  10. He was also awarded with the UEFA Club Midfielder award in 1998 and the World Soccer Player award in the same year.
  11. He is a two-time French Player of the Year award winner (1998, 2002). Also, he won the Ballon D’or in 1998.
  12. Edgar Davids, his Juventus teammate, said “He is a special player. He creates space where there is none. No matter where he gets the ball or how it comes to him, he can get out of trouble. His imagination and his technique are amazing.”
  13. In the 1998 World Cup, Zidane gave a stellar performance, scoring two goals against Brazil and winning the trophy for the Les Bleues on home turf. He earned himself some blemishes in this journey, one of them being the first French player to receive a red card in a World Cup after he stamped Fuad Anwar in his teams’s second match againt Saudi Arabia.
  14. After the Word Cup, a huge image of Zidane was projected on the Arc de Triomphe with the words “Merci Zizou” written on it.
  15. He won the Fifa World Player of the Year award thrice (1998,2002,2003).
  16. In 2000, he won the Euro Cup with France, making the team the first to hold both the World Cup and the Euro Championship since West Germany in 1974. He was named  as the UEFA Euro Player of the Tournament.
  17. For his sublime skills, he was named as the Serie A Player of the Year in 2001, beating the likes of his teammates Alessandro Del Piero and Gianluigi Buffon.
  18. He was awarded with La Liga’s Best Foreign Player award in 2002. In the same year, he was also awarded with the UEFA Club Footballer of the Year award and was named in the FIFA World Cup Dream Team.
  19. Ironically, he couldn’t score a single goal leading to France’s elimination in the group stages of the 2002 World Cup – the worst performance by the defending champion in the competition’s history.
  20. Zidane joined the Galacticos of Real Madrid in 2001 for a world record transfer fee of 47 million pounds at that time. The previous record was held by his teammate, Luis Figo, with a transfer fee of 36 million pounds.
  21. His match-winning goal against Bayern in the 2002 Champions League final has been touted as one of the best in the competition’s history.
  22. Winning the 2002-03 season with Real Madrid, he was named the Fifa Player of the Year for the third time.
  23. In 2004, he became the second highest goalscorer and assists provider in the La Liga. For his enthralling performances in this season, he was voted by fans as the best European footballer of the year in the past 50 years in UEFA’s fiftieth anniversary Golden Jubilee poll.
  24. Zidane announced his retirement after the 2005-2006 season. On the bidding of then France manager, Raymond Domenech, he came out of retirement for the 2006 World Cup and helped France win their qualifying group from an embarassing fourth place. He earned his hundredth cap for France against Mexico in a friendly. This would also be his last match at the Stade de France. All was going well for the legend and , subsequently, for the team. But a moment of provocation from Italian centre back, Marco Materazzi, proved too much for Zidane and he ended up giving the infamous headbutt to the Italian resulting in a red card for the French player. France lost the match on penalties. The dream ending for Zidane took a heavy nosedive.
  25. He was bestowed upon the honour of being the Sports Illustrated Player of the Decade in 2009 and was awarded with the Laureus Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011.
  26. The Complex voted him as one of the “Top 10 Muslim athletes of all-time” although he considered himself as a “non-practicing Muslim” in 2012.
  27. He was named as one of the World Soccer 100 Greatest Players of the 20th Century in 1999 and was also a part of the World Soccer Greatest XI Of All Time in 2013.

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