Madrid (AFP) – What makes a young, successful, manager like Zinedine Zidane walk away from Real Madrid, as the Frenchman did this week after just two and a half years in the job?
It is almost certainly the relentless pressure of constantly chasing success at a club competing with Spanish rivals Barcelona for not only domestic, but global domination.
– Pressure cooker club –
At Real Madrid, no-one is allowed to take their foot off the pedal. When you have been European champions 13 times, trophies are quickly forgotten, creating a constant state of stress which led Zidane to resign after less than three years in the job. He opted to walk away while still basking in the glory of his third consecutive Champions League title, saying he feared failing next season.
“It wears away at you here,” he said on Thursday.
Zidane said the low point of his coaching career at the club was being knocked out of the Copa del Rey, Spain’s cup competition, in January by modest Leganes. He faced intense criticism at the time.
“There are difficult times, when you ask yourself: ‘Am I still the right person for the job?'” he said.
Having shone in the Madrid shirt as a player in a five-year stint from 2001 to 2006, Zidane took the job of coach knowing full well that no Real manager in the 21st century has lasted more than three and a half years in the job.
“No material is more combustible than Real Madrid, and it is always exposed to fire,” sports newspaper Marca said on Friday.
– Daily grind –
Training sessions, team meetings, matches, post-match press conferences, warm-down, training — at Real the coach is always juggling tasks in a packed day with the glare of the media on him.
It might explain why Zidane often appeared at press conferences seeming happy but somehow empty, even blank-faced.
“Living every year like that, with so many competitions, so many matches and so much travel, it can be enormously wearing,” Alfonso Perez, who played for both Real (1991-1995) and Barcelona (2000-2002), told AFP.
“When you go into a club like that, you know what you are letting yourself in for. There is enormous pressure and you have to do well. It’s like an exam, 24 hours a day,” the former Spanish international striker said.
Pep Guardiola and Luis Enrique complained of the same pressure when they managed Barcelona and both stayed no longer than four years in the job. “It takes its toll in the end,” Guardiola said.
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