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A student of history

Croatia's Blazevic at helm of his own army

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Posted: Tuesday July 07, 1998 11:52 AM

  Blazevic is in his fifth year coaching the Croatian team (Allsport)

PARIS (AP) -- Miroslav Blazevic believes in things like white scarves, gendarme's hats and his astrologist's charts. There's nothing haphazard, though, when he plots Croatia's strategy.

A keen student of military history, Blazevic compares game plans to battle plans.

Explaining how his team stunned Germany 3-0 in the quarterfinals, Blazevic talked of Rommel, the "desert fox" German field marshal who lost the crucial battle in World War II in northern Africa when his tanks ran out of fuel.

"I wanted to neutralize German fuel -- Oliver Bierhoff can jump as high as he can, but if he doesn't have enough crosses, he won't achieve anything," Blazevic said after the game.

The veteran coach, who is 63, has a had a long career in former Yugoslavia, Switzerland, France and Greece.

Blazevic was born in Travnik, in central Bosnia-Herzegovina. Nicknamed Ciro (pronounced Chee-roh), Blazevic played for Sarajevo, Rijeka and Dinamo Zagreb, all three in the former Yugoslav top division.

He then went to Switzerland and played for Vevey and Sion, and began his coaching career in that country. He won the Swiss league title with Grasshopper Zurich, the cup with Sion and also coached the Swiss national team before returning to Yugoslavia.

In 1982, he guided Dinamo Zagreb to its only Yugoslav league title. As a lucky charm, he wore a luck-bringing white scarf to all the games that season.

Blazevic appears attached to things like that. In France, he's wearing a gendarme's hat, given to him by police in Vittel, the training camp town in eastern France.

He also receives a fax from his astrologist in Zagreb before every game. So far, the astrologist has been predicting correctly.

An eloquent and shrewd man with a passion for chocolate and cigarettes, Blazevic is a master motivator, who gets his players bursting with confidence and enthusiasm.

"He knows how to stimulate players to be part of a team and to work as a team," said Croatian soccer federation boss Branko Miksa. "He knows the psychology of each player, he knows soccer, and he knows how to bring the two together."

Often given to audacious exaggerations, Blazevic is said by some critics to be a megalomaniac who likes to pull all the strings. That earned him another nickname -- Atilla.

When Croatia gained independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, Blazevic returned to Dinamo (now renamed Croatia) -- becoming its president, coach and majority share owner. He has since given up these duties for a seat on the club's board.

Blazevic coached Nantes in France and was jailed fo 17 days in 1995 after being implicated in the match-rigging scandal involving Olympique Marseille. No charges were filed.

After Croatia was knocked out by Germany in the quarterfinals of the 1996 European Championship, Blazevic resigned, but the Croatian federation didn't accept it and he stayed on.

He's in his fifth year as coach. A fervent nationalist, Blazevic is rumored to have been tapped personally by Croatian President Franjo Tudjman.  

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