Rinus Michels
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Rinus Michels | ||
Personal information | ||
---|---|---|
Full name | Marinus Jacobus Hendricus Michels | |
Date of birth | February 9, 1928 | |
Place of birth | Amsterdam, Netherlands | |
Date of death | March 3, 2005 (aged 77) | |
Place of death | Aalst, Belgium | |
Nickname | The General The Sfinx Man of Marble / Mister Marbos |
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Playing position | striker | |
Senior clubs1 | ||
Years | Club | App (Gls)* |
1946-1958 | Ajax Amsterdam | 264 (122) |
National team2 | ||
1950-1954 | Netherlands | 5 (0) |
Teams managed | ||
1960-1964 1964-1965 1965-1971 1971-1975 1974-1974 1975-1976 1976-1978 1979-1980 1980-1984 1984-1985 1986-1988 1988-1989 1990-1992 |
JOS (Amateurs) AFC (Amateurs) Ajax Amsterdam FC Barcelona Netherlands Ajax Amsterdam FC Barcelona Los Angeles Aztecs 1. FC Köln Netherlands Netherlands Bayer Leverkusen Netherlands |
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1 Senior club appearances and goals |
Marinus ("Rinus") Jacobus Hendricus Michels (February 9, 1928 – March 3, 2005) was a Dutch football player and coach. He played his entire career for the club Ajax Amsterdam, whom he later coached, and was a member of the Netherlands national team both as a player and as manager.
Michels became most notable for his coaching achievements, having won the European Cup with Ajax and the Spanish league with FC Barcelona, and having had four tenures as coach of the Netherlands national team, whom he led to reach the final match of the 1974 World Cup and to win the 1988 European Championship.[1] He is credited with the invention of a major football tactic known as "Total Football" in the 1970s,[1] and was named "coach of the century" by FIFA in 1999.[1]
Contents[hide] |
[edit] Playing career
Michels, born in Amsterdam, grew up at the Olympiaweg, a street nearby the Olympic Stadium. He celebrated his ninth birthday on February 9, 1936, when he received a pair of football shoes and an Ajax jersey. Moments later he was playing with his father at a small field near their home.[2] Via Joop Köhler, a friend of the family who was commissioner at Ajax, Michels was introduced to the club and became a junior member in 1940.[2] When World War II started, and specially during the Dutch famine of 1944, Michels' career was set on hold.[2]
Club Lille OSC had also wanted to contract him, but an international career did not go through as the Dutch Army did not let him go because he had to go on duty.[2]
[edit] Ajax first team
On June 9, 1946, Michels was invited into Ajax' first team squad to replace the injured Han Lambregt. In his debut, Ajax beat ADO 8-3 and Michels scored five times.[2] That season Ajax won their fourteenth division championship and a year later they won the Dutch national championship.[2]Although there were doubts about Michels' technical skills, team members like Cor van der Hart and captain Joop Stoffelen were enthousiastic about his strength and heading capabilities.[2] Indeed Michels was characterized for his hard work rater than for his technical qualities.[3]
He went on to become a regular for the club, and between 1946 and 1958, he appeared in 264 league matches for Ajax, in which he scored 122 goals.[2] In 1958, four years after the introduction of professional football in the Netherlands and one year after winning his second league title he was forced to end his career due to a back injury.[2]
[edit] National team
Michels' international playing career with the Dutch national team lasted five matches, making his debut on June 8, 1950 away to Sweden, losing 4-1.[4] He also lost all of his remaining matches as an Oranje player, 4-1 to Finland, 4-0 to Belgium, 6-1 to Sweden and 3-1 to Switzerland. [4]
[edit] Coaching career
Michels returned to Ajax as head coach in 1965, winning the national championship four times and the KNVB Cup three times in the following six years. In 1971, he managed Ajax's to the first of three consecutive European Cups. While at Ajax, Michels modernised the game by introducing Total Football and using the offside trap (See also: Total football). He then moved to Barcelona in the second part of 1971, leading the team to win the Primera División title in 1974, before joining the Dutch national team.[1]
[edit] 1974 World Cup
Michels was appointed national coach by the KNVB after the Netherlands had qualified for the 1974 World Cup. He debuted as Dutch coach on March 27, 1974, in a 1-1 draw against Austria. At the finals tournament in Germany, their second ever World Cup participation, the Dutch impressed many observers with their style of play which was backed up by their results; they won their first round group, then in the second round group they defeated Argentina and the defending world champions Brazil, and reached the final after five wins and one draw, with 14 goals for and one against in six matches. At that point, Michels was undefeated in 9 matches as the Netherlands coach. His team then opened the score against Germany in the final, but the host team came back to defeat them 2-1, ending their run. That match was the last of Michels' first tenure in charge of the Dutch team, whom he would return to coach ten years later.
[edit] Later years
Michels later moved on to the United States where he coached in the ill-fated North American Soccer League. He ended his club coaching career with Bayer Leverkusen in 1989.
He died in the City of Aalst hospital in Belgium after a heart surgery (his second after 1986).
[edit] Personality and legacy
Michels became known as a person who was keen on his money and did not want to spent much of it. A common joke in the Ajax changing rooms in these days was: "Does anybody actually know the color of Michels' wallet?".[2] His intelligence quotient was high and during foreign trips he always brought a book with him, which he wanted to have read completely before coming home.[2] He was known as someone who did not need anybody and who felt happy on his own, but sometimes he joined his team mates and share their enthousiastic friendships.[2] At the celebrations of Ajax' 50th birthday in 1950 he was the organiser of the humoristic show that was held and during traditional parties he and his friend Hans Boskamp climbed up the stages to sing some duets.[2] After matches he was always singing in the showers of the changing rooms as well, even when the match was lost.[2]
Michels was also known as a practical joker. At a hotel he once borrowed a fur coat of a lady and pretended to be a lady to his team mates.[2] During a training session in Lille the players went fishing and Michels who did not enjoy himself jumped into the water.[2]
Due to his authoritarian style as coach and his statement that "football is war" Rinus Michels was called The General. Michels was named coach of the century by FIFA in 1999.[1] Fans of Ajax try to rebrand the Amsterdam ArenA as Rinus Michelsstadion (Rinus Michels Stadium)[citation needed]
[edit] Quotes
- "Football is war."[1]
- "It is an art in itself to compose a starting team, finding the balance between creative players and those with destructive powers, and between defence, construction and attack – never forgetting the quality of the opposition and the specific pressures of each match."[5]
[edit] About Michels
- "Both as a player and as a trainer there is nobody who taught me as much as him. I will miss Rinus Michels". "I always greatly admired his leadership.", Johan Cruijff[6]
[edit] Honours
[edit] Player
- Dutch league winner: 1947, 1958
[edit] Manager
- UEFA European Football Championship winner: 1988
- FIFA World Cup finalist: 1974
- European Cup winner: 1971
- European Cup finalist: 1969
- Eredivisie winner: 1966, 1967, 1968, 1970
- La Liga winner: 1974
- KNVB Cup winner: 1967, 1970, 1971
- Copa del Rey winner: 1978
- DFB Pokal winner: 1983
[edit] Other
- Named knight in the Order of Orange-Nassau: 1974
- Named officer in the Order of Orange-Nassau: 1988
- Named Dutch manager of the century: 1999
- Named knight of the KNVB: 2002
- UEFA Lifetime Award: 2002
- Best Manager in 50 years of professional football in the Netherlands: 2004
Preceded by Michel Hidalgo |
UEFA European Football Championship Winning Coach 1988 |
Succeeded by Richard Møller Nielsen |
Preceded by Ernst Happel |
European Cup Winning Coach 1970-71 |
Succeeded by Stefan Kovacs |
Preceded by Frantisek Fadrhonc |
Dutch National Coach 1974 |
Succeeded by George Knobel |
Preceded by Kees Rijvers |
Dutch National Coach 1984-1985 |
Succeeded by Leo Beenhakker |
Preceded by Leo Beenhakker |
Dutch National Coach 1986-1988 |
Succeeded by Thijs Libregts |
Preceded by Leo Beenhakker |
Dutch National Coach 1990-1992 |
Succeeded by Dick Advocaat |
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f Berend Scholten. "Michels - a total footballing legend", UEFA.com, 2005-03-03. Retrieved on January 29, 2007.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Droomland", rinus-michels.info. Retrieved on January 30, 2007.
- ^ The Times Online. Rinus Michels obituary. The London Times. Retrieved on February 1, 2007.
- ^ a b "Rinus Michels - 09 februari 1928", voetbalstats.nl. Retrieved on January 30, 2007.
- ^ "Rinus Michels", FIFAworldcup.com. Retrieved on January 30, 2007.
- ^ Paul Gallagher. "Father of Dutch soccer dies", The Age, 2005-03-04. Retrieved on January 30, 2007.
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Netherlands squad - 1974 FIFA World Cup Runners-up | ![]() |
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1 Geels | 2 Haan | 3 van Hanegem | 4 van Ierssel | 5 Israël | 6 Jansen | 7 de Jong | 8 Jongbloed | 9 Keizer | 10 R. van de Kerkhof | 11 W. van de Kerkhof | 12 Krol | 13 Neeskens | 14 Cruijff | 15 Rensenbrink | 16 Rep | 17 Rijsbergen | 18 Schrijvers | 19 Strik | 20 Suurbier | 21 Treijtel | 22 Vos | Coach: Michels |
[edit] External links
- Sven Goran Erikson's tribute to Rinus Michels(March 3 2005)
- Netherlands national team summary of matches coached
- Rinus Michels fan site
Categories: Articles to be expanded since February 2007 | All articles to be expanded | Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | Dutch football managers | Dutch footballers | Netherlands international footballers | Ajax Amsterdam footballers | FC Barcelona managers | La Liga managers | Ajax Amsterdam managers | Netherlands national football team managers | UEFA European Football Championship-winning managers | FIFA World Cup 1974 managers | People from Amsterdam | 1928 births | 2005 deaths