Queiroz cautiously optimistic for Iran future
The Star – TEHRAN, Iran boss Carlos Queiroz is too well versed in football politics to accept all the issues he faces in his role will be fixed following the nuclear deal that will lift financial sanctions on the Islamic Republic.
The former Real Madrid and Portugal manager has already resigned twice in his four years at the helm of the Iran side following rows with administrators on how to improve the running of the game in Asia’s best nation, according to FIFA rankings.
The former Manchester United assistant boss is desperate for greater investment to help a side he led to last year’s World Cup, but spending is not easy.
Mansour Ghanbarzadeh, an Iranian Football Federation committee member, told Reuters last month the IFF were still waiting on $10 million of World Cup prize money, frozen as part of international sanctions.
But that money, part of more than $100 billion of Iranian assets frozen abroad, should be unblocked soon after Iran and six major world powers reached an agreement last month imposing limits on Tehran’s nuclear programme.
“There is a lot of hope now. There is a full field of positivity in front of us,” Queiroz told Reuters in a recent interview of the deal.
“Between the dream and reality sometimes there is a gap, but no doubt about it there is a lot of hope and everybody expects things will come much more easy for the preparation.”
Queiroz complained of being in a one-sided marriage upon quitting the Iran job following the World Cup in Brazil last year, only to perform a U-turn and stay on.
He refused to name names, but hinted of continued tensions with members of the IFF or sports ministry who didn’t agree where the money should be spent.
“Iranian football needs better fields, better facilities. We need to invest in coaching education, youth teams. A lot of areas we must invest and implement specifics,” he said.
“There is no future without investment. The future is all about how much you work today and prepare to anticipate the problems of the future. The less you do, the more problems you will face in future. The key point is not to talk about today.
“But some people they are sure they are not here in 15-20 years so they don’t care about the future. This is not the right way.”
Queiroz’s main bug bear in his time in Tehran has been around preparation for tournaments. The Mozambique-born coach, 62, was unhappy with the lack of fixtures and cancelled training camps before the World Cup, where Iran came with a heart-breaking minute of holding eventual runners-up Argentina to a draw.
They played just two warmup matches, in comparison to six by other rivals, prior to January’s Asian Cup where they were knocked out by arch adversaries Iraq in the quarter-finals.
Since that tournament, though, Iran have played and beaten Chile, lost in Sweden and have Japan scheduled to visit in October. “How it should be,” Queiroz said.
A further test of the IFF arrangement for better preparations would be next week’s joint 2018 World Cup and 2019 Asian Cup qualifiers at home to Guam on Sept. 3 and away to India five days later.
“The plan is already designed. The vision is in place. Now they just need to execute the plan,” he said as Iran look to build on a disappointing opening 1-1 Group D draw in Turkmenistan.
“Next week we have a couple more games, we are still trying to implement the plan we designed, we will see next week the conditions that we have.”