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    I remember the good old days, many on PFDC wanted and was exhited about rumors of Artur Jorge, only because he had a big Sibil. (Not joking 😅) So if we are going with a euro b-c coach, atleast he should have a big Sibil.

    Hector bayad Sibil bezare 🥸👍




    Comment


      Holy shit, Cuper's record is completely disastrous. He led Egypt to three losses at the 2018 (including to Saudi and Russia), led Uzbekistan to a 2-0 loss to PALESTINE in 2019, and was fired quickly in his latest stint in the Congo. It's a mess. I would take GN or Nekounam over him in a heartbeat.

      Comment


        Found this, think its about FM but still talks about his style. Interesting. No idea if it is correct or not.



        FMSCOUT
        FM 2014 Tactics Hector Cuper's Tactics for FM 2014


        The successful tactics of Transformational Argentinian Maestro. I give you the 4-4-2 and 4-2-3-1 of Hector Raul Cuper for use with Football Manager 2014.

        By Roberto.Mancini on Nov 15, 2013 96421 views 17 comments Download Now
        Downloads: 13218 / Size: 1.4 kB / Added: 2013-11-15

        Who is Hector Cuper

        Héctor Raúl Cúper (born 16 November 1955 in Chabás Santa Fe,Argentina) is a former central defender who played mostly for Ferro Caril Oeste and was 2 times capped with Argentinian National Team.

        Cuper began his coaching career at Huracan, a year and a half after his retirement. After three years, he moved to Club Atlético Lanús, and two years later, he made the jump to Europe. In 1997, he was hired by RCD Mallorca, and the first season he led the modest club to the final of the Copa del Rey, he would lose against FC Barcelona. The following season, the team reached the final of the Cup Winners' Cup, beating Heart of Midlothian, on the road, losing to SS Lazio. However, in the same season, the team had their revenge against Barcelona, winning the Supercopa de España in 1998. This season RCD Mallorca also recorded its best historical position in the championship with a 3rd place, allowing the team to play in the UEFA Champions League.

        Cuper moved to Valencia in 1999, where he continued his bad luck at the end, losing the final of the Champions League twice in succession, in 2000 against Real Madrid, and in 2001 against Bayern Munich on penalties.

        In 2001, Cuper was hired by Italian club Internazionale, where he reached the third and second championship in successive seasons. In the Champions League, his team lost the semifinal of the 2002-03 competition for city rivals Milan on away goals. Continuing his bad luck runs in "final", Inter under his command infamously missed what could have been the club's first scudetto since 1989, on May 5, 2002 Lazio 4-2 and handed the Scudetto rivals Juventus until the last day the season. He was fired from the club after six matches of the 2003-04 season, when the team was in 8th place.

        After a year off work due to an argument contract with Inter, Cuper managed to Mallorca again during the 2004-05 season, when the team was already in a relegation position after 10 matches, saving the team from relegation in the last game the season. Suffering poor results, despite his many signings, Cuper decided to leave the team in February 2006, with the team at the bottom of the division.

        He began the 2007-08 season in charge of Real Betis, but was dismissed on December 2, 2007, after the loss of his team against Atletico Madrid. On March 11, 2008, he was introduced as the new head of the relegation struggling Parma Serie A team, replacing Domenico Di Carlo in charge of gialloblu. He was then fired two months later, before the final game of the season after winning only two in 10 matches as a coach, this eventually led to lowering of Parma to Serie B.

        On August 1, 2008 Cuper became the first coach of the national team of Georgia. Due to their inability to win a single match as Georgia's head coach, however he did not prolong the contract that expired in December 2009.

        On November 3, 2009 Cuper agreed to continue his managerial career with Greek club Aris Thessaloniki by the end of the 2009-10 season. On December 15, 2009 Cuper has renewed his contract with Aris through June 2011. On 24 April Cuper lost another final, this time in the Greek Super League against Panathinaikos, continuing his series on the negative end.
        In 2010-2011 season, Aris Cuper lead in their first appearance in the Round of 32 of the UEFA Europa League, taking 2nd place in Group B with 10 points after two surprise wins against Atletico Madrid.

        On January 18, 2011 after some bad results in Greece, Hector decided to resign from his managerial position.

        On June 29, 2011 Cuper moved to Racing Santander signing for one season. However, after five months, he resigned due to poor performance of the team, which was placed in the last position in the league BBVA. He signed a contract with the Süper Lig sideOrduspor on December 19, 2011.
        Philosophy Tactics

        Hector Cuper is among the best tacticians in modern football, because he constantly applies his teams excellent pressing against direct attacks and very physical work in the field. It uses both the pressing 4-4-2 and 3-5-2, always by combining marking and man triple coverage area. He always gives specific instructions to his players, in order to avoid possible conflicts tactics during the game and he is 90 position 'during the match.
        When he was in Valencia he built a very strong team, which was playing a 4-4-2 direct and strong, with thorough and excellent pressing counterattacks. Cuper prefers a 4-4-2 in his in his ward to be an extra central midfielder (Mendieta, Kily Gonzalez) and he always uses an attacker or Recoba frame fast as Claudio "Piojo" Lopez.

        Cuper makes exhaustive trainings constantly and he is famous for his strict discipline methods that create a family atmosphere and respect between the players. He always makes the morning training sessions in order to kill the sense of laziness among the squad without insulting players. He speaks very little and straightforward and he analyzes each part of tactics in a detailed manner. He is famous for discovering young talents like Albiol, Farinos, Marchena, Albelda, Kallon, Obafemi Martins and many others in every team he worked. He used 17 players in a rookie selection of Georgia in 18 months, where he worked. Cuper likes to relax with jazz music and loves sea a lot. That's why he decided to stay in Ordu, although he knew the huge competition in Turkcell League.
        The FM14 Tactic

        Ladies and gentlemen, I give you the 4-4-2 and 4-2-3-1 of Hector Raul Cuper.

        I tested with the following teams:

        PSG, National Team of France, Milan, like Monza, Sampdoria and Sevilla.

        All results were very good and similar. Don't expect Barcelona or Manchester United football just have in mind that you will have a very strong team and compact, it will be very strong and competitive against any opponent.

        * Cuper is never – ever using slow players, like playmaker – no10, slow strikers or static defenders. He hates lazy players with soft personality and mild work rate.

        As for training, considering working with this formation you can may follow these steps:

        * Physical fitness must be the hardest as possible. After pre-season you (Teamwork)

        * Impose defense focus for 2 months (Def.Position)

        The successful tactics of Transformational Argentinian Maestro. I give you the 4-4-2 and 4-2-3-1 of Hector Raul Cuper for use with Football Manager 2014.

        More in the link


        Comment


          I take back my Advocaat post then,

          Hector for TM ? 🤔
          Doesnt sound too bad at all

          Comment



            From the comments, the writing style sure reminds me about somebody.. could it be? what are the odds?? 🤔 😀 what a great post!

            Roberto.Mancini
            9 years ago
            Some people have here have not realise to reach two times in a row in Champions League final with a modest team like Valencia ...As well have not realise what means to reach the Cup's Winners Cup Final with relegation fight Mallorca ...All the finals were lost .

            Question :Could somebody bet in the beggining of the season that all these 3 teams will

            reach the final ?

            Response :Nobody .Even Valencia fans after 2000 final against Real admitted ,we will be

            here again after 50 years ...Cuper said "I dont know ,maybe next year will come again to

            play a final"

            Find the difference .On who is the looser and who is the winner ..​

            Comment


              Taj said no to Hector cuper.

              Comment


                Originally posted by kateb View Post
                Taj said no to Hector cuper.
                Thank God. What a disaster that would have been.
                "This is a totalitarian system whose presence people feel in their blood and in their flesh on a daily basis. And it’s one that does not grant freedoms of any kind, or accommodate people’s demands in any way. What is increasingly clear is that there is clear demand for change in the regime. What the people want is regime change, and no return to the past. There is a very real possibility of regime change." - Nasrin Sotoudeh

                Comment


                  Youtube channel
                  shahramg1
                  Has alot of classic tm and club games..
                  I recommend it for iran football JUNKIES

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by kateb View Post
                    Taj said no to Hector cuper.
                    Kna sports best news agency 😁

                    Comment


                      Any chance they go after Halilhodzic?
                      He's old and fights with everyone, but he knows what he's doing.

                      Comment


                        Originally posted by Nokhodi View Post
                        Any chance they go after Halilhodzic?
                        He's old and fights with everyone, but he knows what he's doing.
                        Not bad choice or unreasonable or unrealistic,
                        HE WILL SURVIVE UNTIL THE AC
                        BUT HE won't make I until 2026 wc with persian media..

                        After england job with all the drama and tabloids
                        Iran job imo is second hardest job to survive WITH CRAZY PERSIAN MEDIA which monitor the amount of farts hc dose in a day, and relate it to his forhead.

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by Keshwardoost View Post

                          Kna sports best news agency 😁
                          If only oracle had blue eyes

                          Comment


                            Apparently TS new coach Paco Jemez is a candidate…….seems like the best option of all rumored coaches IMO

                            Team Meli Iran
                            Perspolis FC
                            Malavan Bandar Anzali


                            "I will never be able to say good bye to Iran. I have a feeling of belonging to this country and to the people." - Carlos Queiroz

                            Comment


                              Originally posted by taremiscores View Post

                              Thank God. What a disaster that would have been.
                              And why not Queiroz--if he's willing to continue? Who is better? Recently, Ebrahim Ghasempour made some il-advised and baffling comments about him, characterizing Queiroz as a coach who had been a failure with Egypt and Colombia and had therefore accepted to coach Iran because he had no other alternative or because Iran couldn't afford to hire a better coach . Let's make something clear: Carlos Queiroz has been a winner as a head coach throughout his career, having been the manager of Portugal, Iran, Colombia, South Africa, and Egypt national teams, in addition to countless other domestic clubs around the world. Surely he's had some setbacks throughout his long career, but with every team he's also enjoyed moderate to outstanding success. He essentially changed the football culture within Iran, being constantly in search of new talent and teaching his players to embrace a system, a structure tailored to decent offense predicated on great defense. The comment about his being a failure with Colombia and Egypt is especially irksome, as Queiroz reached the final of African Cup with Egypt and lost on penalties as a result of the opposite team's fans' unfortunate gamesmanship. Is that what we consider failure? And what about Colombia? There, he was hamstrung by some major injuries and the players ultimately turned out to be too obstinate. Let's not forget that Colombia failed to qualify with his replacement as well. It was just not the right team for him.

                              As for Queiroz not reaching the knockout stage, do you really blame him? He only had two months with the team and then was completely blindsided and overwhelmed by sudden political upheaval in the country, an event that had paralyzed the team and weakened morale amongst the players and coaching staff. No coach would have been able to do better under those circumstances, even though he managed to eke out a win against Wales, a team with emotional stability and far superior financial resources and overall preparation. And despite the team's dire situation, Iran under Queiroz even came close to drawing with the U.S., arguably one of the best teams in the tournament. I strongly believe that, had the players been in a better mental and emotional state, the ultimate goal of reaching the second round would have been achieved this time.

                              Let's face the facts: At this stage, the federation is broke, and no Iranian coach is ready to take the helm, to accept relentless layers of criticism following a potentially difficult journey. As for foreign coaches, the real good ones are hard to get, and even if they finally commit to a sojourn in Iran, they'll have a rough time acclimating to the current society and learning about the football culture, the domestic league and current national team players. Queiroz is already past that stage. He also has the respect of the players and possesses the know-how to lead Iran to the next World Cup. He's, for now, the best candidate.

                              Comment


                                Originally posted by orbicular View Post

                                And why not Queiroz--if he's willing to continue? Who is better? Recently, Ebrahim Ghasempour made some il-advised and baffling comments about him, characterizing Queiroz as a coach who had been a failure with Egypt and Colombia and had therefore accepted to coach Iran because he had no other alternative or because Iran couldn't afford to hire a better coach . Let's make something clear: Carlos Queiroz has been a winner as a head coach throughout his career, having been the manager of Portugal, Iran, Colombia, South Africa, and Egypt national teams, in addition to countless other domestic clubs around the world. Surely he's had some setbacks throughout his long career, but with every team he's also enjoyed moderate to outstanding success. He essentially changed the football culture within Iran, being constantly in search of new talent and teaching his players to embrace a system, a structure tailored to decent offense predicated on great defense. The comment about his being a failure with Colombia and Egypt is especially irksome, as Queiroz reached the final of African Cup with Egypt and lost on penalties as a result of the opposite team's fans' unfortunate gamesmanship. Is that what we consider failure? And what about Colombia? There, he was hamstrung by some major injuries and the players ultimately turned out to be too obstinate. Let's not forget that Colombia failed to qualify with his replacement as well. It was just not the right team for him.

                                As for Queiroz not reaching the knockout stage, do you really blame him? He only had two months with the team and then was completely blindsided and overwhelmed by sudden political upheaval in the country, an event that had paralyzed the team and weakened morale amongst the players and coaching staff. No coach would have been able to do better under those circumstances, even though he managed to eke out a win against Wales, a team with emotional stability and far superior financial resources and overall preparation. And despite the team's dire situation, Iran under Queiroz even came close to drawing with the U.S., arguably one of the best teams in the tournament. I strongly believe that, had the players been in a better mental and emotional state, the ultimate goal of reaching the second round would have been achieved this time.

                                Let's face the facts: At this stage, the federation is broke, and no Iranian coach is ready to take the helm, to accept relentless layers of criticism following a potentially difficult journey. As for foreign coaches, the real good ones are hard to get, and even if they finally commit to a sojourn in Iran, they'll have a rough time acclimating to the current society and learning about the football culture, the domestic league and current national team players. Queiroz is already past that stage. He also has the respect of the players and possesses the know-how to lead Iran to the next World Cup. He's, for now, the best candidate.
                                You didn't read kna weeks ago.
                                cq has gone to qatar

                                Comment

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