For this Interview, I have the pleasure to ask questions from one of the duo that make up the fantastic website http://italia1990.com.
Mr. Aasan @1990qual took great time and interest in responding all the questions with context and detail.
The Interview will be divided in three parts, part a (World Cup Qualifiers), part b (Preparations ahead of the World Cup) and part c (World Cup Finals).
Questions and Analysis:
The Interviewee is:
Mr. Joachim Aasan
Mr. Aasan’s
contact info:
On Twitter: @1990qual
Website: http://italia1990.com
Part a-World Cup Qualifiers:
Soccernostalgia Question: What was the state of Czechoslovakian Football in the Fall of 1988?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: With the highly
acclaimed 1988 European Championships already history, albeit a recent one, the
international footballing agenda was about to embark on the qualification for
the 1990 World Cup. Czechoslovakia had failed to qualify for a major
international tournament since their participation at the 1982 World Cup, when
they had bowed out at the first group stage, managing two draws only, against
WC debutants Kuwait and later, more respectably, France. Since the 1982 World
Cup, Czechoslovakia towards the end of the European summer six years later had
no remaining names from the 22 who had travelled to Spain. They had also since
gone through four national team managers, with the latest being legendary
former player Josef Masopust. Returning, as he had indeed been in charge of
their 1982 troops, to the position was 52 year old Jozef Vengloš. He had a
doctorate in physical education earned in Bratislava as far back as in 1955. At
club level, no team from the domestic league had ventured beyond the
quarter-finals stage in either of the three European competitions, and even
that stage had only been reached twice over the course of the past five
seasons. Czechoslovakia were turning into something of a European footballing
mediocrity. Back at national team level, a humiliating 3-0 loss in Finland in
the qualification for the 1988 Euro would have strongly limited any optimism
they still harboured at that time for reaching the competition proper in West
Germany. Denmark ultimately qualified at Czechoslovakia's expense. So, against
this backdrop, Vengloš had needed to assemble a squad strong enough to
challenge in a tough-looking qualification group for Italia '90, where they'd
come up against Belgium, Portugal, and Switzerland, with Luxembourg providing
the cannon fodder. Still, with two World Cup berths up for grabs, they must
have considered themselves as likely candidates for participation, despite
their third-rank status.
Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 15, April 1990 (Jozef Venglos and Vaclav Jezek) |
Soccernostalgia Question: The last time Czechoslovakia had been in the World Cup had been in 1982 with Jozef Venglos as Manager. He was re-appointed in 1988 for the 1990 World Cup qualifiers. What were the expectations in a Group with Belgium, Portugal, Switzerland and Luxembourg?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: While I carefully
touched on this already in reply to the previous question, I think
Czechoslovakia would've felt that they were in with a shout, although they had
been drawn from pot 3, behind first seeds Belgium and second seeds Portugal.
While the Belgians under legendary manager Guy Thys remained favourites in what
was still a fairly open group, Vengloš must have felt that they could give
Portugal a run for their money with regards to finishing runners-up. Certainly,
at home, whether it be in Bratislava or in Prague, Czechoslovakia would be a
match for any opponent. It should also be pointed out that Vengloš was working
with Václav Ježek, a well-respected 64 year old coach who had indeed been in
charge of the national team during their magnificent triumph in the 1976
European Championships. For this, Ježek would later win the vote, in regards to
the country's greatest manager in the 20th century. He'd won domestic
championships with Sparta, and he'd worked abroad both in the Netherlands and,
most recently, in Switzerland.
Soccernostalgia Question: His job was made harder even before the qualifiers when on July 1988, vital National team elements: Lubos Kubik and Ivo Knofilcek defected to the West during their club, Slavia Prague’s tour of West Germany. Describe the players’ status and its implication on the National Team?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: Czechoslovakia in
this era had a number of good footballers. Still, in order to stand a fair
chance of actually qualifying for the World Cup, Mr Vengloš would need to have
available to him every talented player within the country's realm. Slavia
Prague had been preparing for the upcoming domestic season in West Germany in
the summer of '88, and both Knoflíček and Kubík had opted to try their luck in
the West through defecting. They had both featured for Czechoslovakia in their
impressive 1-0 friendly win in Copenhagen on June 1, as the Danish had been in
preparation for the upcoming European Championships, with Kubík even netting
the solitary goal. They were already among the more senior members of the
Czechoslovakian team, as the 24 year old Kubík, a stylish midfield playmaker
with a gifted left foot, earned his 19th cap in Denmark, and forward Knoflíček,
26 years of age, was winning his 26th. In losing them both for the entire
qualification campaign, as they'd both be expelled from the national team for a
year and a half, Vengloš would need to rethink. It is also worth noting how Czechoslovakia
through 1988 only ever had those two representatives from Slavia Prague, with
city rivals Sparta the chief supplier for the national team with no less than
nine players turning out at country level during the course of the calendar
year. Sparta had just won the league for the second campaign running. They'd go
on and claim the next three Czechoslovakian first league titles, too.
Photo From: WC 90 - CORRIERE DELLO SPORT – GUIDA
(Lubos Kubik) |
Soccernostalgia Question: Can you summarize Czechoslovakia’s qualification process for the 1988/89 season?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: I will try!
Czechoslovakia got their campaign off the mark with an expected two points from
their journey to Luxembourg, although the win might perhaps have been less
impressive than they'd been hoping for, given the fact that the Swiss had
already visited the same venue and won even more comprehensively (4-1). Their
goals had come from midfield schemer Ivan Hašek and libero and team captain
Jozef Chovanec. In a group totalling 20 fixtures, eight per team,
Czechoslovakia would only play twice in the autumn of '88, with their next
match being group favourites Belgium on home soil in Bratislava. Despite
pinning their opponents back for large chunks of the game, the Czechoslovaks
could not find a way past the impressive Preud'homme, and the game finished
goalless in front of nearly 50 000 people in Bratislava. Still, by the turn of
the calendar year, Vengloš' team found themselves atop the qualification table,
with their next fixture the return leg in Belgium at the end of April. By that
point, the Belgians had claimed another vital away point through levelling late
in Portugal, while the Portuguese themselves had picked up a total of five
points from three home ties, having defeated both Luxembourg and Switzerland in
the process. This had left Czechoslovakia trailing both the Belgians and the
Portuguese, so they'd have been looking to get something out of the game in
Brussels. However, on the day, the Red Devils put them to the sword and won by
2-1, despite Czechoslovakia putting up a fine battle and only losing to a late
Degryse strike. They also saw the return to national team action of defenders
Straka and Kocian, who were by now plying their trade in the West German
Bundesliga. A routine 4-0 home win over Luxembourg saw Czechoslovakia's
qualification campaign back on the rails, and a 1-0 away win in Switzerland
courtesy of Skuhravý's third goal in two matches saw them secure a third win in
five. This meant that by the summer of 1989 they were well positioned only a
point behind the Belgians, although Portugal, who had yet to play away, were
just two points in their wake, with a match to spare. The crunch game came on
Oct 6, with Portugal the visitors in Prague. They had completed their first two
away ties of the qualification in losing comprehensively in Belgium and then
vitally winning in Switzerland, so that prior to kick-off, they were both on
seven points from five matches. Despite losing striker Griga to an early red
card before 20 minutes of action, the hosts claimed a hugely important win by
the margin of 2-1. Both goals had come courtesy of shrewd midfield man Bílek. A
fourth straight qualification win subsequently followed as Switzerland were
sent packing after 3-0 in Prague. Significantly, this meant Czechoslovakia were
two points ahead of Portugal and with a handsome seven goals cushion before
both countries' final qualifier: their head to head in Lisbon. Portugal were
never going to win by the four goals demanded of them to pip the
Czechoslovakians, and despite the hosts doing what they could to try and
achieve that win, Stejskal's inspired performance between the sticks ultimately
saw to that Czechoslovakia could return home with a scoreless draw. The point
meant they were qualified for Italia '90, and only second to group winners
Belgium on goals scored. It had ultimately been a very fine qualification
campaign by Vengloš' squad.
Soccernostalgia Question: Czechoslovakia’s sweeper Jozef Chovanec became the first Czechoslovakian player under the age of 30 to transfer to a European side when he joined PSV Eindhoven in November 1988 (as a future replacement for Ronald Koeman). How was this transfer regarded at the time?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: I believe Chovanec,
28 at the time, didn't transfer to PSV until the turn of the year, as he still
featured for Sparta domestically in December '88. He'd then make his debut in
the Dutch league in February '89, playing alongside such greats of the game as
Gerets, Vanenburg, (Ronald) Koeman and not least Romário. Any Eastern European
player to make the move from behind the Iron Curtain and on to the Western
European scene naturally raised some debate. Chovanec was a key man for club
and country alike, and was among Vengloš' most trusted players, typically being
used in the libero position. Furthermore, he was also the captain of his
country, a distinction he must have held with great pride. Fellow international
defenders Kocian and Straka had earlier completed their moves to West German
football, so a pattern was beginning to emerge. It had only seemed reasonable
that players of this calibre would move abroad once they were allowed to by the
age of 28.
Photo From: Soccer International, Issue 4, April 1990
(Jozef Chovanec) |
Soccernostalgia Question: He struggled at the club and eventually drifted into midfield and Venglos chose to place him in midfield as well. Explain this decision?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: Chovanec obviously
arrived at a club which were reigning Dutch and European champions, so it was
never going to be a foregone conclusion that he'd become a regular starter
right away. Like any player moving from one country to another, he'd need time
to adapt, both to his new surroundings and to the way PSV boss Guus Hiddink
wanted him to contribute. The PSV libero role belonged to a player of Ronald
Koeman's calibre, so it went without saying that Chovanec's opportunity to
stake a claim for a starting berth likely lay elsewhere. He was an accomplished
player on the ball, and he had fine physical attributes, and so was an adept
man in the centre of the pitch. With Kocian back in the mix internationally,
the now St. Pauli defender would look to occupy the national team's libero
position, although for the couple of fixtures against Belgium (away) and
Luxembourg (home), it had indeed been Chovanec who had got the nod for the
spare man at the back job, with Kocian in the holding midfield role. They would
swap roles for the remainder of the qualification, with Chovanec probably
offering more quality in possession than Kocian was capable of.
Soccernostalgia Question: After his transfer Venglos took away the captaincy from Chovanec and made Ivan Hasek his new captain. Venglos explained that he wanted a home-based player to be the Captain. What do you think of this decision?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: The manager's
decision probably rested mainly on the fact that it was far easier for him to
maintain a close connection with Hašek than with Chovanec after the latter's
switch abroad. The highly energetic Hašek remained a key player for club and
country alike, while as we've already touched on, Chovanec would need some time
in order to properly get going at his new club. Stripping the now Netherlands
based player of the captaincy could surely not be seen as any form of
punishment, nor should it be viewed as particularly dramatic. Chovanec would
still remain key to Vengloš.
Soccernostalgia Question: Getting back to the two defectors, Lubos Kubik returned to Czechoslovakia and joined Italian side Fiorentina in the summer of 1989. Ivo Knofilcek would have to wait until December 1989 before joining West German side St. Pauli (18 months of inactivity). How is their action looked upon historically?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: First of all: Their
story is a remarkable one. It had been Knoflíček's idea originally to defect,
and as he was sharing room with Kubík on Slavia Prague's 1988 summer camp in
Hannover, West Germany, he persuaded his team mate to join him. It had been
Derby County in England who had wanted Knoflíček, much on the back of his two
excellent goals for Czechoslovakia against Wales in qualification for the 1988
Euro. Their owner, famous media mogul Robert Maxwell, was himself of
Czechoslovak origin, and had been the instigator behind the move. However, in
defecting, Knoflíček and Kubík were given 18 months long bans by the football
federation, and since they were without official documents, there was no way
they were going to enter the UK. They spent half a year at Maxwell's holiday
residence in Spain until they obtained Bolivian (!) passports, which would
eventually allow them entry into the United Kingdom. Still, once there all they
could do was train, and the situation was obviously a tricky one for all
parties. While Kubík would return back home to Czechoslovakia for a while,
Knoflíček opted to try his luck in Italy, where he had what he thought would be
a stop-over with Foggia prior to a move to Juventus. However, whilst there, he
was contacted by Ján Kocian, a former team mate from the national side, who was
by that time playing for St. Pauli in the West German topflight. Knoflíček was
inspired by their conversations, and would travel to Hamburg, looking to
impress. He must have done so, as under coach Helmut Schulte he would make his
debut for the club in a 2-1 home win against Borussia Monchengladbach in
December. Matchwinner? Ivo Knoflíček. Kubík would end up at Fiorentina, where
he made his debut at the start of the 1989/90 season, as his ban had been
lifted by the FA once he'd returned to his home land. While all of this appears
surreal by today's standards, it was very much a fact for players from behind
the old Iron Curtain that they were only allowed to join clubs in the West
after fulfilling certain criteria, of which age was probably the main one. So
it is in this context that Knoflíček and Kubík must be
Soccernostalgia Question: The World Cup qualification coincided with the Fall of Communism in Eastern Europe. In fact, Ivan Hasek actually addressed a crowd in November during the protests. Can you give more detail?
Mr. Joachim Aasan @1990qual response: What was unfolding
across Eastern Europe around this time was of such proportions, totally
unprecedented, and something which obviously was of huge historical
significance. The fall of communism and ultimately the break-up of the Soviet
Union would have implications also for football, as clubs in Eastern Europe
would no longer able to hold on to their major assets. In Czechoslovakia, their
'liberation' became known as the 'Velvet Revolution', and it took place in the
second half of November '89. In an interview made by French football magazine
'Onze mondial' with Sparta Prague and the national team's midfield man Michal
Bílek, the then 24 year old recollects the memorable days which would redefine
the entire Eastern Europe: "We were due to play Inter Bratislava in a
league match, and just prior to this students approached us and explained to us
what had happened in the protests the previous day, on Nov 17, which they had
organized. They asked for our support, which we did not hesitate in providing.
The Inter game was called off. Subsequently, we, the Sparta players, released a
press statement denouncing the abuse of the totalitarian government. On Nov 21
we joined the general strike. We marched from our stadium to downtown, flags in
hand. On Wenceslas Square, our captain Ivan Hašek harangued the extatic crowd,
and was received with a standing ovation. I will never forget this date, it was
wonderful, totally surreal. The revolution changed my life. That day I stopped
being just a footballer; I became a free man."
Photo From: Onze-Mondial, Issue 21, October 1990
(Ivan Hasek) |
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