Setiap pemain dimanapun pasti punya Ego dan kalo pelatih ga bisa meredam ego 
pemain ya ga bakal sukses. Karena disitulah salah satu mengapa pelatih bisa 
sukses bersama klubnya.
menurut gw tidak ada yang salah dengan Roman Abramovich. Dia hanya berusaha 
membuat tim yg sebelumnya kurang dipandang menjadi suatu tim yg cukup disegani 
di EPL maupun Eropa. Dalam pembelian pemain suatu club tidak ada yg semuanya 
berhasil. Setiap club pernah membeli pemain overated dan overvalued yg seperti 
ente bilang. Dalam proses mencapai kesuksesan pasti ada hal2 yg tidak sesuai. 
Sebut saja Lentini di Milan dulu yg berhasil memecah record transfer, kemudian 
di club2 besar lain juga ada 
Mengenai keberhasilan Hiddink terlalu dilebih2kan tentu itu bisa diperdebatkan 
karena setiap orang juga memiliki objektivitas sendiri2. Kemudian masalah 
keberanian tidak memasang John Terry heheh ini adalah hak seorang Pelatih. 
Tentu Hiddink atau siapapaun pelatih yg sukses lebih tau mana pemain yg lebih 
baik utk dimainkan agar mencapai kemenangan disetiap pertandingan. Toh John 
Terry ini England Skipper dan dia telah membuktikannya dilapangan baik dari 
mental maupun skill.

Gw pikir juga Roman tidak harus malu besar jika gagal lagi. Inikan bagian dari 
proses dan rencana dia. Dan Roman pernah mengalaminya bersama Scolari yg 
gagal...

Salam,
Mokhan

--- In [email protected], Hendra Kurniawan <hndra.kurnia...@...> wrote:
>
> Buat penggemar chelski...
> Tantangan terbesar ancelloti adalah bahasa (seperti juga scolari) dan ego
> pemain senior. Tiap pemain punya agenda tersendiri. Masing-masing merasa
> besar dan ini kesalahan roman main borong dengan harga mahal sehingga pemain
> yang sebenarnya overated dan overvalued dan berubah menjadi "superstar"
> berkat topangan pers dan sistem yang dibuat roman/chelsea. Akhirnya mereka
> menjadi ga bisa disentuh. Sebagai contoh: pelatih yang katanya hebat macam
> hiddink (dia juga kontroversial. Ada yang memandang dengan kritis,
> keberhasilan hiddink terlalu dibesar-besarkan) apa berani dia ga memasang
> john terry dan memilih carvalho dan alex yang sebenarnya punya kualitas
> lebih? Kenapa scolari tempo hari ga memanfaatkan quaresma dan malah lebih
> percaya kepada malouda atau kalou?
> 
> Scolari dan hiddink pilih main aman. Ikutin aja sistem yang udah ada. Poles
> sana sini. Scolari ga dibackup big boss. Permintaannya untuk robinho disabut
> pada menit terakhir. Hiddink lebih berhasil karena dia disupport roman dan
> bahasanya lumayan. Gimana dengan ancellotti  yang 200% dibackup roman?
> Dugaan gw, kalo dia gagal, roman malu besar. Dan akhirnya menjual chelsea.
> 
> 
> Mark Hughes, Deputy Football Correspondent
> 
> It is just as well that, even accounting for his huge losses over the past
> year, Roman Abramovich is still worth $7.5 billion (about £4.6 billion),
> because he would be absolutely useless on Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? The
> Chelsea owner would soon run out of lifelines, because he is forever phoning
> a friend.
> 
> Every time Abramovich finds himself in trouble he opens his address book.
> Avram Grant, Guus Hiddink and now Carlo Ancelotti have answered the call
> that is guaranteed to make them countless millions themselves, but Chelsea
> are yet to become what Abramovich claims he wants: a well-run,
> self-financing and mature football club.
> 
> Abramovich could point out that the only time he has departed from his
> head-hunting template since dispensing with José Mourinho — the recruitment
> of Luiz Felipe Scolari last summer — the result was an unmitigated disaster.
> The Russian blamed others for appointing Scolari against his initial wishes,
> but can have no such excuses if Ancelotti also fails to cut it in the
> ultra-competitive Barclays Premier League. The Italian is very much the
> boss's man.
> 
> Grant and Hiddink achieved varying levels of success in the short term, thus
> vindicating Abramovich's judgment, but Ancelotti's task will be far harder
> because he is expected to deliver consistently on a long-term basis. His
> biggest problem will be following the remarkable Hiddink.
> 
> The Dutchman made the job look easy, although, in reality, it is anything
> but — and is likely to become even more difficult next season. Manchester
> United will be as formidable opponents as ever, Liverpool and Arsenal should
> be stronger, while big-spending Manchester City and Tottenham Hotspur will
> also be on the march.
> 
> Ancelotti's situation is compounded by being a very different man, with a
> contrasting CV, when compared to Hiddink. The Dutchman is the ultimate hired
> hand, having been employed all over the world on a variety of short-term
> projects, while Ancelotti is a virtual hermit, who still lives on the farm
> on which he was brought up in Reggiolo, in north Italy, and has not worked
> outside his native country.
> 
> One obvious area of weakness is his English, which as David Beckham told
> Chelsea's England contingent in the team hotel last night, remains extremely
> limited. This handicap is more significant than many realise, with many
> Chelsea players commenting that Scolari's inability to get his ideas across
> clearly brought his downfall.
> 
> Another of the problems facing Ancelotti that Hiddink did not have to
> contend with is the pressure inherent in the post. His future will be
> questioned after only a couple of bad results.
> 
> The Italian also has a couple of football-related problems to address, most
> notably the need to overhaul a squad that is the oldest of England's
> Champions League clubs.
> 
> What to do with Didier Drogba — the Ivory Coast striker is now 31 — will be
> the first item on his agenda, with the answer providing the key to which
> other players he sells and buys.
> 
> Ancelotti will also need to take command of a dressing room containing
> powerful players who have the ear of the owner, an unhealthy situation that
> has contributed to several managerial departures. "We all have egos and it's
> not easy to deal with it," as Drogba put it yesterday with some
> understatement.
> 
> Drogba also suggested that the new manager should be given time to prove
> himself, although history indicates that is a forlorn hope. Ancelotti will
> have racked up the best part of £1 million in wages by the time the season
> starts in August, but his stay in London has the potential to be shorter
> than the average quiz show.
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>


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