Zizou – Kickeridol der maghrebinischen „Beurs“ (2004)

Mit seiner faszinierenden Fußballkunst hat sich Zinedine Zidane nicht nur in die Herzen der nordafrikanischen Einwanderer Frankreichs geschossen. Auch bei der diesjährigen Europameisterschaft stellt der Sohn algerischer Einwanderer erneut seinen Ruf als Weltfußballer unter Beweis.

“Zizou, Zizou…!” – frenetisch feierten französische Fans in Portugal ihr großes Fußballidol Zinedine Zidane nach dem 2:1 Sieg im EM-Vorrundenspiel gegen England. Sprechchöre, die nicht nur im Estadio da Luz in Lissabon, sondern auch in Paris widerhallten, wo 8.000 Fußballbegeisterte den Ausgang des Matchs auf einer Großleinwand vor dem Pariser Rathaus verfolgten und ausgelassen ihre “Equipe Tricolore” mit Autokorsos und Hupkonzerten hochleben ließen.

Beckhams Alptraum

Möglich gemacht hatte die Niederlage der Briten kein anderer als Zidane, der seinen Gegenspieler David Beckham für dessen verpatzten Elfmeter alt aussehen ließ, als er kurz vor Spielende zwei Tore binnen weniger Minuten erzielte und damit Titelverteidiger Frankreich vor einer Blamage rettete. Der 31jährige Shootingstar von Real Madrid hatte es wohl ernst gemeint, als er vor dem Spiel in der englischen Zeitung “Daily Star” prophezeite, dass es keinen Zweifel gäbe, dass Frankreich gewinnen werde.

Doch wer ist dieser talentierte Ballkünstler, der als Welt- und Europameister und Champions-League-Sieger alle Rekorde zu brechen scheint und laut einer UEFA-Umfrage zu Europas bestem Spieler der letzten 50 Jahre zählt?

Angefangen hatte alles in La Castellane, einer tristen Vorstadt von Marseille, wo Zidane als eines von fünf Kindern muslimischer Einwanderer aus Algerien groß wurde. Bereits als kleiner Junge zeigte er seine bravourösen Stärken am Ball, wenn er zusammen mit seinen Kumpanen auf der Straße kickte, so dass schon bald Talentscouts auf ihn aufmerksam wurden. Mit 14 Jahren wurde er ins Fußballinternat von Cannes geholt, keine drei Jahre darauf spielte er schon beim AS Cannes in der ersten französischen Division.

Vom Straßenkicker der Banlieus zum internationalen Fußballstar

Besondere Unterstützung erhielt er in dieser frühen Phase seiner Karriere insbesondere von seiner Familie: “Was ich geworden bin, verdanke ich meiner Familie”, so Zidane. Begeistert äußerte er sich vor allem über seinen gläubigen Vater Smail, der ihm gute Tugenden, Ernst und Anstand beigebracht habe. “Ich bin Muslim, praktiziere aber nicht, und ich bewundere meinen Vater, der sein ganzes Leben den Glauben praktiziert hat”, erklärte Zidane einmal dem “Journal du Dimanche”.

Durch die Initiative der Eltern kam Zidane schließlich bei einer Gastfamilie unter, um für die Fußballschule in Cannes zu trainieren. Von da an nahm Zidanes Erfolgsstory ihren Lauf: 1992 wechselte er vom AS Cannes zum Fußballklub Girondins Bordeaux, mit dem er es in das Finale des UEFA-Pokals schaffte.

In Michel Platinis Fußstapfen

In die Fußstapfen der französischen Fußballlegende Michel Platini trat er anerkanntermaßen bei seinem Länderspieldebüt 1994 gegen die Tschechische Republik. Als er in der 62. Minute ausgewechselt wurde, stand es 0:2. Das Spiel endete 2:2 und beide Treffer erzielte der Debütant Zidane.

Rasch feierte der französische Fußballcrack Welterfolge: Für den Traditionsklub Juventus Turin, der ihn 1996 unter Vertrag nahm, holte er 1997 und 98` den italienischen Meistertitel. Mit dem triumphalen Sieg der französischen Nationalelf gegen die Brasilianer im WM-Endspiel 1998 avancierte Zidane zu Europas Fußballer des Jahres und FIFA-Weltfußballer. Mit dem spanischen Rekordmeister Real Madrid, für den Zidane noch bis 2007 unter Vertrag ist, gewann er außerdem die Champions-League, den Supercup und eine spanische Meisterschaft.

Zidane oder “Zizou” (“Die weiße Katze”), wie ihn seine Fans nennen, brilliert nicht nur mit seiner Leichtigkeit und Ballbeherrschung, mit der er seine Gegner regelmäßig austrickst und das Leder sicher ins Tor befördert, sondern vor allem auch durch seine Spielübersicht, Konzentration und Gelassenheit auf dem Feld.

Nie lässt er sich auf gegnerische Provokationen ein, bewahrt stets Ruhe und bleibt bis zur letzten Spielminute am Ball, wie das eindrucksvolle Match gegen die Engländer in der EM-Vorrunde erneut bewiesen hat.

Doch neben dem Spitzensportler und Weltfußballer gibt es noch einen anderen Zidane, den “großen Bruder” der maghrebinischen Einwanderer in Frankreich, der “Beurs”, die ihn wie keinen anderen Einwanderer als ihren großen Held feiern. Und es gibt den Zidane, der sich in der Heimat seiner Eltern für das Allgemeinwohl engagiert. So finanzierte er vor einigen Jahren die Leitungssysteme für die Wasserversorgung in dem kleinen algerischen Dorf Tagmount.

Engagement für Algerien

Auch das schwere Erdbeben in Algerien vor über einem Jahr ließ ihn nicht unberührt. Gegenüber spanischen Medienvertretern äußerte er sich besorgt um seine Verwandten in der algerischen Mannschaft: “Ich kann mich nach dem Erdbeben in Algerien nicht auf den Fußball konzentrieren. Ich kann zu meiner Familie momentan keinen Kontakt aufnehmen, weil in meiner Heimat alle Telefonleitungen zerstört sind. Ich bin in großer Sorge”, erklärte Zidane.

In seiner Heimatstadt Marseille veranstaltete er daraufhin zugunsten der Opfer der Erdbebenkatastrophe ein Benefizspiel, den so genannten “Coup de coeur”.

Trotz seines sozialen Engagements für die Menschen in Algerien hat sich Zidane bisher nie zu politischen Statements über die Politik in dem Maghrebstaat hinreißen lassen – auch nicht über die Frankreichs. Nur einmal hat er sein politisches Schweigen gebrochen: Als der Chef des rechtsextremen Front National, Le Pen, den 31jährigen Profifußballer von seinen fremdenfeindlichen Ausgrenzungen ausnahm und als “Sohn Französisch-Algeriens” bezeichnete, reagierte Zidane ohne Umschweife: Er spiele jedenfalls garantiert nicht für Le Pen.

Arian Fariborz

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Zinedine Zidane wins the crown again (Fifa.com, 2001)

02 Feb 2001

A total of 150 national coaches voted Zinedine Zidane FIFA World Player 2000 – ahead of Portugal’s Luis Figo and the Brazilian Rivaldo. After 1998, this was the second time the 28-year-old has won the award.

When Zidane received the FIFA World Player 2000 award in Rome on 11 December, he was beaming all over his face and visibly proud. It was the same in 1998. Then, he was voted best of the best particularly as a result of his two goals in the 1998 World Cup Final against Brazil, goals that helped to make France World Champions for the first time in their history. Now Zidane has won the crown again. In choosing Zidane, the record number of 150 national coaches taking part in this year’s vote acknowledged his extraordinary performances at the European Championship in the Netherlands and Belgium. This attacking-minded player – sometimes midfield maestro, sometimes striker – was majestic in leading “Les Bleus” to their tournament win. Zidane was dribbler, tactician, playmaker, superb passer and goalscorer all rolled into one. He scored the golden goal that decided the semi-final against Portugal. In the final, when virtually the entire football world had come to terms with an Italian win, he was tireless in urging his team on. With just seconds to go, France hit the match-saving goal to take the game into extra-time before going on to win – again thanks to a golden goal.

Previous Winners
1999 Rivaldo (Brazil)
1998 Zinedine Zidane (France)
1997 Ronaldo (Brazil)
1996 Ronaldo (Brazil)
1995 George Weah (Liberia)
1994 Romario (Brazil)
1993 Roberto Baggio (Italy)
1992 Marco van Basten (Netherlands)
1991 Lothar Matthäus (Germany)

 

Zidane’s election as World Player of the Year 2000 was criticised by some experts because, while playing for his Italian club Juventus Turin after EURO 2000, the Frenchman committed a vicious foul for which he was justifiably sent off and suspended for several matches. Zidane may be a spirited footballer, but he does not trample all over the idea of fair play. Following his slip-up the Frenchman expressed his regret and vowed to keep better control of his emotions in future. It would appear that the 59 national coaches who voted ‘Zizou’, as the French affectionately name the legitimate successor to the legendary Michel Platini, have forgiven him for his mistake.

Zidane, the romantic
Watching Zidane on the pitch is an eye-opener even for neutral spectators. It is sheer pleasure, supreme entertainment, and could almost be described as culture. His mastery of the ball is virtually without equal, he does not kick it, he caresses it. He treats the football as if it were a raw egg, sliding it through his opponent’s legs, lifting it elegantly over flailing defenders, bending it delicately around the wall and into the net from free-kicks, dropping it 30 or 40 yards straight to a teammate’s feet. The maestro does not play football, he celebrates it. Zidane on the pitch is an expression of pure romance.

This rather reserved Formula 1 fan, who once lived in a foster family, has the admiration of millions around the world. They love watching the seemingly effortless way in which he goes about his work. Zidane enjoys hero status in France in particular, and this cannot simply be put down to the victories at the 1998 FIFA World CupTM and EURO 2000. In his home country Zidane is admired not least because of his down-to-earth nature and appreciation of his origins. He regularly visits Castellane, the poor quarter in the northern part of Marseille, where ‘Zizou’ grew up as one of five children to a supermarket night watchman and a housewife. Zidane does not deny his roots. He is proud of descending from an Algerian mountain people, and publicly praises his father Smail for all the advice he has given him on his journey through life. Zidane still cares for the people in Castellane, playing football on the street with the local youth every now and then, just as he did before becoming one of the greatest players ever.

Fifa.com

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Zidane keeps thoughts to himself (2002)

Pierre Serisier

 

Zinedine Zidane, who dreams of leading France to a second consecutive World Cup title next month, has always preferred to express himself with a soccer ball rather than with words.

Even as a child playing on the sunbaked, sandy pitch on the housing estate where he grew up in the rundown La Castellane area of Marseille, Zidane was shy and reticent.

“There are things I don’t like to talk about. Just because I’m a public figure doesn’t mean I have to express myself on certain things, on my origins for example. These are personal matters which are not be discussed publicly,” he said, brushing aside questions from journalists before a friendly match against Algeria last year.

Zidane’s parents were born in Algeria and moved to France to settle in Marseille after the country declared independence in 1962.

Yazid — the name he was first given — was born in June 1972 and went from time to time with his brother to stay with relatives back in North Africa.

“When we were kids, our parents used to send us there for the summer holidays. I can remember it clearly but I don’t really want to say anything about this,” he said.

Before Zidane was 10 years old, it was obvious that the slim and frail boy had the skills to become a great footballer.

Ironically it was not Olympique Marseille, the prominent French first division club of the 1990s, who spotted his talent.

Zidane was still a teenager when he went to the Cannes youth training centre in 1988 before Girondins Bordeaux coach Rolland Courbis, who always had strong links with clubs on the French Riviera, offered him his first professional contract when he was just 20.

 

FRENCH PRIDE

Two years later national coach Aime Jacquet, drafted in after France failed to qualify for the 1994 World Cup, picked Zidane for an international friendly against the Czech Republic in Bordeaux.

The French were down 0-2 when Zidane went on as a substitute and hit two brilliant goals within two minutes to equalise and save his side’s pride on home soil.

From then on, Jacquet has always included the player in his plans.

“I would always have a guy like Zidane at 10 per cent of his shape rather than any other player at 100 per cent. Why? Because with just one move, just one pass he can win you a match,” Jacquet said once.

Jacquet decided to include Zidane instead of Eric Cantona, the Manchester United hero, in the French squad for the 1996 European championship in England.

“He (Jacquet) took his little suitcase and flew there to talk to Eric face to face,” said France team manager Henri Emile. “He explained to him (Cantona) why he was not going to pick him. Aime really admired Zidane.”

But an accident nearly put the Bordeaux playmaker out of the European event.

A month before France’s first match against Romania in Newcastle, Zidane was involved in a car crash while driving his powerful Mercedes at full speed.

He escaped with a scar on the eyebrow and a sore neck but the accident left him shaken and he failed to score a goal at the championship as France went out to the Czech Republic on a penalty shootout in the semifinals.

 

CHILDHOOD HERO

“I’ve always loved sport cars,” Zidane said then. “I really like speed very much. I would dream of driving a Ferrari, I mean on a race track.”

Zidane named his first son Enzo but said the name was not intended as a tribute to the elder of the Ferrari brothers.

“No, I named him Enzo after Enzo Francescoli who has always been my idol. When I was a kid, he was the player I wanted to be. He had great style. He was elegant.”

Uruguay World Cup midfielder Francescoli played for Marseille in the 1980s.

Despite becoming the world’s most expensive player when he joined Real Madrid from Juventus Turin for $66 million and a national hero when he score twice in the 3-0 defeat of Brazil in the 1998 World Cup final, Zidane has always kept his feet on the ground.

He leads a quiet family life and has helped his parents to settle in a comfortable house near Marseille.

Now and then, he goes back to La Castellane where he still has friends.

He no longer plays soccer with them but they still call him Yazid.

“Very few people know it and very few people use my first name, except my close relatives. Everybody else calls me Zinedine.”

Having two first names is just another way for Zidane to keep his private life separate from his public one.

 

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Zidane is the man England must fear (2004)

By Oliver Kay
As Zidane prepares for his fifth international tournament — and perhaps, at 32, the last at which he will be seen at the peak of his powers — only the extent of his greatness remains open to question. It is he, rather than Rivaldo or Ronaldo, who has been the outstanding player of the past decade, but his performances in Portugal will do much to determine his final standing in the pantheon of the sport’s greats where, at present, he stands in a group just below Pelé and Diego Maradona.

Like David Beckham, Zidane endured a difficult season with Real Madrid, but he claims to be heading to Portugal in peak condition. “My end of season was arduous and I lived through two very hard months,” he said. “Above all, it was my morale that took a blow, but now I feel good. I have suffered less physically than before and I’ve been working to rediscover the feelings that have escaped me in the last few months. The difficult moments are behind me.”

Zidane’s view was endorsed at the Stade de France on Sunday, when his bewitching performance and well-taken late goal ensured that the Euro 2004 favourites rounded off their pre-tournament preparations with a 1-0 win over Ukraine. “Just because ‘Zizou’ didn’t win any titles with Real Madrid this season, it doesn’t mean he’s any less of a player,” Mikaël Silvestre, the Manchester United and France defender, said. “You saw tonight that he’s a great, great player.”

Sunday was also the night when Zidane emerged as the natural leader of the team. He had captained his country before but, with Marcel Desailly left out for reasons of form as much as fitness, it is possible that Zidane will retain the armband against England. “I am merely the stand-in; Marcel is the captain,” Zidane said later, but Jacques Santini, the France coach, did not offer Desailly the same guarantees in his post-match address.

If Desailly is omitted against England — losing out to William Gallas, as he has done at Chelsea in recent times — the captaincy will remain with Zidane, making him the direct counterpart of Beckham. The contrast between these galácticos — one a shy, retiring genius, the other a top-class player whose global renown is founded more on looks than talent — could bring another fascinating dimension to a conflict that Zidane expects to be “fearsome”.

“He (Beckham) is a player I’ve got to know well over the past year, one who has had a very good season, and he’s a formidable player,” Zidane said. “Even after changing position, he has still been a terrific player. But now, of course, I am hoping that Sunday’s game will be difficult for him and that we can control him. It will be a very difficult match, very hard to win, but, on the other hand, when we are at our best we can do special things.”

Zidane’s mesmerising talents were learnt on the dusty and unforgiving streets of La Castellane, a humble suburb of northern Marseilles. It is those lowly beginnings, as the youngest son of an Algerian warehouse worker that make him such a symbol of France’s multicultural society.

It is his ability and his accomplishments with a football, though, that recently saw him voted the most popular Frenchman of all time. Over the past decade, he has won a World Cup, a European Championship and a European Cup, as well as league titles in Italy and Spain, but a triumph in Portugal, he said, would be special. “We’re confident we can defend our title,” he said. “We have the sort of team that can do that. It’s up to us to be ready.”

In the World Cup two years ago, with Zidane carrying an injury, France were not ready. This time they are and, if England are to have any chance of stopping them, they must first stop Zidane.

 

 

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Zidane, in the name of all his near and dear (Fifa.com, 1999)

(FIFA.com) 19 Mar 1999

DENIS CHAUMIER is editor-in-chief of France Football

During the build-up to the World Cup last June, Zinedine Zidane was hailed all over France as the Messiah who would lead Aimé Jacquet’s squad to the pinnacle of world football. Without him, everyone said, no hope.

For the Blues and Zidane, the long road that led to paradise started at the Stade Vélodrome in Marseilles, the town where the young Yazid (his first name) was born almost twenty-six years ago. As chance would have it, it was here in his home town that the World Cup finals began for France, with the match against South Africa. Zidane spoke from the heart: ” To come back to this stadium and play for France in front of a crowd of sixty thousand, that was a great honour. I shall always be proud of being French, but I can’t stop myself thinking about the huge poster of me that was put up on the Corniche de Marseilles. It gave me the shivers. It reminded of the years when I was a boy, watching every match that Olympique Marseilles played, standing there below the huge billboards. Now I am up there on the billboard myself, and when I think about it, my heart starts to pound.” A statement which demonstrates the sensitivity of this player and shows how aware he is of every nuance and the wisdom with which he views it all.

Zinedine Zidane
Born: 23.6.1972 in Marseilles, France
Nationality: French
Clubs: 1988 – 1992 AS Cannes
1992 – 1996 Girondins Bordeaux
1996 – Juventus Turin International
International games: 43 A internationals / 6 goals (as of December 31, 1998)
International debut: August 17, 1994, vs. Czech Republic
Honours: UEFA Cup runner-up 1996
Toyota Cup winner 1996
Italian Championship winner 1997, 1998
Champions League runner-up 1997, 1998
World Cup winner 1998

 

Family and football

Since those days when he was a youngster in la Castelane, one of the northern suburbs of Marseilles, where life is not always easy, the two things that have been important to him are his family and the game of football. The son of an originally Kabyle family, he truly adores his father Smail. This man, who raised Zinedine along with three brothers and a sister, was venerated as the “guiding light of his life”, almost as a mystic figure. The French number 10 constantly remembers his father for the efforts he made, his honesty and the steadiness of his look, as well as all the football he played as a boy, games full of spontaneity and fun, enjoyed in the company of the other lads of his age who were members of the local team, La Foresta.

Sharing the honour

Everything he has achieved as a man and as a player are based on these two pillars. From the time he left home at thirteen and a half to join the training camp belonging to AS Cannes until the moment he won his second Italian championship with Juventus in Turin in May 1998, Zidane has never stopped improving step by step, nor lost the magic of his football, nor the strength of his convictions. So, when he was awarded the Golden Ball by France Football as French player of the Year 1998, he thought first about his family: about his wife Véronique and their two children Enzo and Luca; about his father of course, his mother Malika, his grandfather Pepe, his brothers and his sister. They all travelled to Paris for the presentation ceremony, along with fifteen or more of his boyhood friends, whom he honoured by having them at his side during this festive occasion. Zinedine Zidane is not a man who keeps things all to himself; he shares them with those who are close to him. He spreads the glory around and acts just the same at a ceremony as he does on the field. His expression is always the same.

Humble and shy

He has developed the talent, now a rare one, of never playing for himself but always for the team. If he tries something individual it is in order to develop a move that will be of advantage to his side. He is not one to overdo things, even if his brilliance and technical skills make it sometimes look like the contrary, and he has the talent of making complicated moves appear simple.

His extraordinary humility has no doubt prevented him from blossoming out earlier into the career that is now his. Off the field he is not a real leader, but on it he definitely is; without doubt the most skilled player, whether he is playing for the French national side or for Juventus whom he has inspired all year.

It is not certain that he has always been aware of his full range of talent, but he now knows for sure what he is worth – this has happened since he joined the great Italian club, where, no one could deny, he has made enormous progress. He will always be an introvert, shy, even if he is becoming more relaxed and open, but he is beginning to understand that he is one of the great players of the modern age. That his unusual talent has been fully recognised this year is only right and proper

 

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Zidane set to grace the big stage perhaps for last time (2004)

France went down on their knees at the 2002 World Cup because Zinedine Zidane injured his thigh a few days before the start of the tournament.

French fans might also kneel, this time as a testimony of admiration, if the balding playmaker leaves his mark on the European Championship as he did in the 1998 World Cup final or the 2002 Champions League final.

With the Euro 2004 finals starting next month, the soft-spoken Zidane will have the opportunity to show once again that he is among the world’s greatest ever players.
The brilliant playmaker has extended his contract with Real Madrid until 2007 but he was a little more coy when asked if he would go on with Les Bleus after the competition in Portugal.

Euro 2004 would then be the best chance for him to go for a second Golden Ball and reduce the gap with other football greats such as Michel Platini and Johan Cruyff, three-times winners of the European Footballer of the Year award.

His nonchalant close control, delicate turns, his ability to create space for himself where none existed a second earlier and his unmatched vision of the game soon made him a favourite at Real Madrid when he won the FIFA player of the year award for the third time in 2003.

“He dominates the ball, he is a walking spectacle and he plays as if he had silk gloves on each foot,” Real Madrid hero Alfredo Di Stefano has said of him.

“He reminds me a bit of myself, although I was a bit quicker. He makes it worthwhile going to the stadium — he’s one of the best I have ever seen.”

That talent enabled Zidane to live a life that most from his humble background in the La Castellane district of Marseille can only dream of.

His family are Algerian immigrants and the area he grew up in is a tough one.

Yet he has crossed boundaries all his life, and remarkably has just been voted top in a poll carried out by the Journal du Dimanche newspaper as the most popular Frenchman of all time.

However, something is still missing. Although he has universal respect both within and without football, he falls short of the utter greatness bestowed upon the likes of Pele, Diego Maradona or Platini.

Still he can live with that for he is arguably among the best 20 players of all time — and the only Frenchman better than “Zizou” as he is known, was Platini.

His genius is set to be on display again in Portugal where France will meet England, Croatia and Switzerland in Group B.

Zidane made his international debut 10 years ago, scoring both France goals in a 2-2 draw against the Czech Republic.

Since then, he has proved himself the key player in the team. He arrived exhausted at the Euro 1996 finals and as a result France were knocked out of the competition against the Czechs in the semi-finals.

He was in impressive form two years later at the World Cup. France won on home soil as they defeated Brazil 3-0 in the final, Zidane heading a double in the first half.

With a top-form Zizou, Les Bleus went on to win the European Championship two years later. Should he repeat his 2003-04 season’s best performances and France be crowned again, Zidane could well leave the French national team.

He would also leave a whole country with tears in their eyes. – Julien Pretot

 

 

 

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Zidane still France’s favorite son (2003)

Monday, December 15, 2003 Posted: 9:43 AM EST (1443 GMT)

PARIS, France (Reuters) – France got rid of its royalty 150 years ago but if kings were to make a comeback, Zinedine Zidane would be hot favorite to be first on the throne.

The popularity of the 31-year-old Zidane is extraordinary, bearing in mind he has not played for a French club since 1996.

No-one has a bad word to say about “Zizou” whose gentle personality, devotion to his family and dislike of the limelight only add to the luster of his displays for club and country.

The midfielder’s two goals in the 1998 World Cup final against Brazil sealed France’s greatest sporting achievement.

That victory in Paris was also a defining moment in modern French life and Zidane, the son of Algerian immigrants, became a symbol for many of how French society should evolve.

 

Favorite personality

A poll in 2000 showed Zidane was France’s favorite personality, ahead of an 87-year-old Catholic priest who gave up a wealthy life to care for the poor.

Three times a winner of FIFA’s World Player of the Year award and arguably the most talented player of the past decade, Zidane moved from Juventus to Real Madrid in 2001 for a world-record fee of $64.4 million.

Playing for the finest national team in French history, Zidane won the European title in 2000. He suffered an injury shortly before the 2002 World Cup finals and his absence in the early games was one of the reasons why the team failed to make it past the first round.

This year he has helped Real to win the Spanish title and France to score 13 straight victories, a national record.

 

Exemplary citizen

His rise from an under-privileged area of Marseille has inspired millions of French children. The fact that he has remained unchanged as a man has inspired their parents as well.

“He is the perfect illustration of what one calls a sportsman,” said Edmonde Charles-Roux, a member of the prestigious Goncourt literary academy. “He has remained an exemplary citizen. He is a prince.”

Zidane is uncomfortable with this sort of adulation. His hero as a child was Uruguay’s Enzo Francescoli, a player Zidane admired as much for his personal qualities as his skill.

“The most important thing is to set an example to youngsters who dream of becoming professional footballers,” Zidane says.

Zidane generally keeps his opinions to himself. The exception was when presidential candidate Jean-Marie Le Pen, head of the anti-immigrant National Front, sneered at the multi-ethnic France team for not being truly French.

Zidane still refuses to use Le Pen’s name. “We were born in France, we are French. Pure French,” Zidane says.

With 18 months left on his contract, Zidane is turning his thoughts to retirement but he is unlikely to become a manager.

“I would be quite happy living quietly with my wife and children away from this environment. I wouldn’t miss it,” he said.

But, without a doubt, football would miss Zinedine Zidane.

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Viewpoint: The magic of Zidane (CBC Sports Online, 2004)

By JOHN F. MOLINARO, CBC SPORTS ONLINE

Any lingering doubts over who is currently the greatest soccer player on the planet were erased emphatically on the second day of competition at Euro 2004.

With France down 1-0 in extra time, French maestro Zinedine Zidane pulled a shroud of darkness over England at Lisbon’s Stadium of Light, scoring two goals in two minutes to secure the most amazing come-from-behind victory in the history of the tournament.

It was, in all honesty, one of the most spectacular, improbable and dizzying finishes to a soccer game I have ever seen. With the contest entering the 90th minute, I, like most people, thought the game was over. France was done and looked to be in serious trouble at Euro after only one game.

Ah, but I should have known that you never count out Les Bleus and the marvellous Zidane.

The French master, like he’s done so many times before, curled a stunning, unstoppable free kick from outside the English penalty area into the far corner of the net, sending the previously disconsolate French fans into a state of delirium.

A minute later, Zidane cast his magic wand again, this time, making a rabbit appear out of his hat by scoring the game-winner on a penalty shot, snatching a brilliant victory from the jaws of a disastrous defeat for the French.

Thunderous chants of “Zizou” “Zizou” echoed throughout the stadium and into the Lisbon night.

England, of course, was hard-done-by. Although having created very little – aside from Frank Lampard’s header off an exquisite David Beckham bender – England held onto a 1-0 for the majority of the match thanks to some neat and tidy defending.

Youngster Ledley King, starting in place of the injured John Terry, was a revelation in the centre of defence, forging a good partnership with Sol Campbell in thwarting French strikers Thierry Henry and David Trezeguet the entire game.

So the result was grossly unfair, with England having deserved to at least walk away with a tie.

But soccer can be a cruel game at times, and teams that don’t take their chances when they are presented are doomed to fail.

Just ask Beckham.

The Real Madrid midfielder had the opportunity to put away the game in the 73rd minute with a penalty shot, only to see his blast stopped by French goalkeeper Fabien Barthez. The French gathered momentum from the penalty save, paving the way for Zidane’s unbelievable heroics in extra time.

And there’s the difference between Becks and Zizou.

While the English captain, all-too-often, gives only brief glimpses of his genius between long stretches of time where he is little more than a spectator, Zidane, consistently, leaves his impression on a game from the opening kickoff to the final whistle with endless moments of breathtaking brilliance.

Sunday’s game underscores the point.

Whereas Beckham only had Fabien Barthez to beat from 12 yards out, Zidane took his free kick from twice that distance, beautifully curled it around the English wall and deposited it into the corner of the net.

And then a minute later, with even more pressure on him compared to when Beckham stepped up to the penalty spot, Zidane coolly dispatched the ball past a helpless David James.

After the goal there was no childish celebration. No dancing around the corner flag. No taking off his shirt and whirling it around his head.

Instead, just a small smile etched on his face, typical of a man who has always carried himself with a quiet dignity and grace.

Calm, cool, collected. Just another day at the office. Just another goal.

Hardly.

“God save Zidane,” screamed the front-page headline in Monday’s edition of L’Equipe, France’s largest sports daily.

“What do you want me to say?” Barthez asked. “He’s the best player in the world.”

A fact that even the most hardened English fan – or David Beckham – would have to admit.

 

 

Cbc sports online

 

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Captain cool with brave heart powers France (Guardian Unlimited, 2004)

Despite his exemplary skills, Zinedine Zidane is modesty personified when the spotlight is turned on him.

Befitting a man who plays football as if he has all the time in the world even in the most dramatic of circumstances, Zinedine Zidane fiddled with his watch as he reflected on Sunday night in Lisbon.

According to the medical people at Real Madrid, Zidane actually suffers from an iron deficiency, which causes him to sweat so effusively during games. Yet everything else about Zidane is cool. As for iron, the man has it in the soul.
It requires a certain amount of steel to step up and do what Zidane did on Sunday, not once but twice. But to hear him speak about it was to witness a footballer as modest as he is gifted. Everybody wanted to know how he does it. So he explained.

“When I put the ball down I knew how important it was because it was the last chance to get into the game,” Zidane said of his free-kick in the first minute of injury time. “Dead-ball situations were the only way to create chances for both sides. So I knew – I just had a go.

“I just swing a boot at it. I did gather my thoughts beforehand and really focused. But then you just throw a boot at it.”

“It was hard on England,” Zidane continued, “but then in a sense such drama is what makes this game beautiful. The great thing for me is that before a free-kick like that I don’t feel any emotion. I know exactly what I have to do, I have scored in these situations before.

“I don’t think about the occasion, I didn’t think how long there was left when I took the penalty. I just go for it. And I practise a lot, I always practise.

“Maybe I did a few more than usual in the last two to three days because I wanted to get used to the ball. You have to practise, whoever you are.” Zidane was captain on Sunday in Marcel Desailly’s absence. Whether he felt any extra responsibility is debatable for such a phlegmatic character, but he swiftly answered the next question: did anyone else fancy it? He said: “As soon as the foul was committed I knew I was the one who should take it.” There was no discussion.
Sitting watching from the bench was Olivier Dacourt, recently departed from Leeds United, one of the multitude. “I had faith,” Dacourt said of Zidane, “he has done it so many times in training. “He did what Manchester United did to Bayern Munich in the Nou Camp.”

At the next table Bixente Lizarazu winced. He played for Bayern that night. Both Lizarazu and Dacourt are fine players, but Zidane confirmed his different-league status on Sunday.

His authority stems from his brilliance on the pitch, but there must also be a great deal of respect for his personality, regardless of his nimble feet. Even in friendly-fire press conferences he has been curt with questions he considered either obvious or repetitive.

But he was never rude and he smiled when the Beckham question inevitably came up. Team-mates at Real Madrid, they were both captains in Lisbon. Afterwards they exchanged jerseys.

Zidane was unprepared to relish his club-mate’s misfortune, even if the noise from the France dressing room was sufficiently boisterous for several England players to mention it.

Zidane even said he did not wholly enjoy the game. England’s tactics worked, he said, as did other French players, and Zidane was mildly concerned that other teams would copy England’s ploy of defending in numbers to smother the France attack.

“It’ll get worse as the tournament goes on,” he said.

Should Robert Pires be moved to the left wing, where he plays for Arsenal, he was asked. “Ask the manager,” was the gruff reply. But he then elaborated - “obviously some things didn’t work. Just because we won it doesn’t mean we did everything right.”

Speak for yourself, Zinedine.

THE GUARDIAN

 

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World Cup Legends – Zinedine Zidane (2002)

By John Brewin

In many people’s eyes he is the best player in the world. And as the key player for the World and European Champions it’s easy to see why. Though a club player of some distinction it’s his exploits for France that have truly made that reputation.

The 1998 tournament is his only appearance in the finals so far as France had failed to qualify for the previous two finals. As a late developer it was Zidane’s first really big chance to impress on the international stage and he grasped it.

But things did not get off to a good start. After a good win over South Africa, Zidane was sent-off against Saudi Arabia for stamping on Saudi captain Amin in retaliation. It meant he was banned for the next two games and missed the vital second round game with Paraguay.

The French, already without a recognised striker of any class or experience, struggled until Laurent Blanc bagged the Golden Goal with just seven minutes to play.

Zidane came in for the quarter-final with Italy but was well-shackled by the Azzurri, who defended like dogs but, as always, lost out on penalties. It was in the semi-final where we finally began to see the best of Zizou as France muscled past Croatia with two goals from Lilian Thuram.

At this point there were many who doubted Zidane’s reputation as the best play-maker in the world but in the final he took the iniative and scored two rare headed goals as France swept a pallid Brazil side away. It was in the midfield that the game was won as Zidane showed his full repertoire.

With every trick in the book, dead-ball skills and a real eye for goal, there’s no doubting that the accolade of best play-maker is deserved. For a big man Zidane has so much skill and invention that defenders are quite often left dumbfounded.

At Euro 2000 he furthered his reputation yet more as France were victorious and it came as no surprise that when Zidane left Italian giants Juventus it was for a world record fee – £46million to Real Madrid.

H’es not the only one still playing but, of all Soccernet’s World Cup Legends, Zidane is the one most likely to play a pivotal role in Japan and Korea.

www.soccernet.com

 

 

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