BRAZIL COACH:
Carlos Alberto Parreira
Carlos Alberto Parreira is attempting to accomplish
what only one man has done before -- win multiple World
Cups. Italy's Vittorio Pozzo did it back-to-back in
1934 (as hosts) and 1938. If Parreira accomplishes that
feat, he will have done it twice away from home, having
guided Brazil to the USA '94 crown.
Parreira, born on March 25, 1943, had a brief career
in the Brazilian Second Division and turned to coaching
in his early 20s. His first international coaching position
was with Ghana at the 1968 African Nations Cup. He has
directed four different teams in the World Cup -- Kuwait
(1982), United Arab Emirates (1990), Brazil (1994) and
Saudi Arabia (1998), whose Olympic team he coached in
the 1984 Summer Games. He wound up coaching the MetroStars
in the 1997 MLS season, but Parreira left before he
could complete his two-year, $1.2 million contract because
the Saudis dangled him an offer he certainly couldn't
refuse: six months of work coaching their World Cup
team for a reported $3 million. He took the offer. The
Saudis dropped their first two matches and helped Alberto
make history once again as he became the first coach
to be fired in the middle of the competition.
Having directed Brazil under ridiculously intense pressure
in 1994 made Parreira a perfect candidate to take over
the Brazilian coaching reins again. "I'd be lying
if I told you I didn't feel the pressure," he said.
"The thing is you are more prepared to face it.
You are more experienced. That's life. . . . It is a
little lighter now. You can't measure the pressure.
We feel there is a better ambiance because in those
times Brazil didn't win the World Cup for twenty-four
years. Now they have won two in the last three. There
isn't the same urgency this time."
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