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Enduring: The real culprits in Shretzky's attack on Drapich - Walla! sport

2022-02-18T18:08:30.579Z


The harsh words of the owners of Kiryat Shmona about his coach shed light on the trajectory of the crash of the status of Israeli coach, and Moshe Boker claims that the battered coaches honestly earned their way into the carpet.


Enduring: The real culprits in Shretzky's attack on Drapich

The harsh words of the owners of Kiryat Shmona about his coach shed light on the crash course of the status of the Israeli coach, and Moshe Boker claims that the battered coaches honestly benefited from becoming the carpet of the homeowners

Moshe Boker

18/02/2022

Friday, February 18, 2022, 5:00 p.m.

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Summary: Urbani Kiryat Shmona - Maccabi Haifa 1: 2 (Sport 1)

It would have been better if Izzy Shretzky's unfortunate remarks about Slobodan Drapic had not been made.

If someone in Shretzky's immediate environment still has any influence on him, they are advised to hang up the phone whenever he intends to go on the air.

Slowly Shretzky becomes irrelevant.



Shretzky has many rights to the revolution he made in Kiryat Shmona, to the many charitable endeavors and contributions to the northern city, and someone should take care to keep his mouth shut so that in the northern city, and not only, we remember him as a great philanthropist with a big heart, huge soul and non-stop giving.

Slowly Shretzky begins to lose his value, giving the impression that he is determined to dismantle and kick the enterprise of his life at all costs.

Too bad.

More on Walla!

In Kiryat Shmona, they will try to initiate a conversation between Drapich and Shretzky, who refuses to apologize

To the full article

Will dismantle the enterprise of his life?

Izzy Shretzky (Photo: Ginny Agency)

But Shretzky is not alone.

His style is much uglier, his tongue sharper and more painful than a knife, he lacks tact and politics from him onwards, but he is not the problem.

Our coaches in the Premier League are the problem.

They and only they.

Shretzky said terrible things about Drapich this week: "He is not a good coach, if he decides to leave now then he should go. There is no chance that he will continue to coach with me next season. It can not be that he will tell me that only he determines."



Drapich, one of the most gentlemanly coaches in our league, absorbed the insult and kept quiet.

He promised to close the affair in private with Shretzky.

It's hard to come up with arguments for Drapich's incredible restraint.

Show me a Premier League coach who resigned because of his boss' statements, because of interference in professional decisions, because of one insult or another that the owner of the team put on him.

Do not strain, you will not find.



Shretzky's words about his coach are not worthy, but they shed light on the Israeli coach's crash course.

The hallucinatory attack only illustrates how the concept of 'coach status', a concept that coaches have loved to use so much, has gone bankrupt.

Gone from the world, without us noticing.

Maybe because Eli Tabib no longer runs around halfway from the honor stand to the locker room and does not pass instructions on notes or by phone to the coach via courier, and maybe also because MS's boss.

Ashdod Jackie Ben Zaken no longer does this in front of the TV cameras.

Distributed instructions to the Betar coach. Eli Tabib (Photo: Yossi Tzipkis)

And maybe Shretzky released steam because he signed Drapich on the understanding that the coach would listen to him, consult with him and even follow his instructions?

After all, Drapich came to Kiryat Shmona after realizing that the owner was not a simple type (to say the least), he knew he liked to be involved not only in the lineup, but also in the style of play and the lineup the team would play.



And maybe Sheretzky decided to appoint Drapich after realizing that the person who worked for Eli Tabib knows and understands the rules of the game well? To the locker room, he may also remember Tabib's embarrassing interview that he candidly revealed about his involvement in determining the lineup and substitutions. Noble to bench for a long time?



After all, the same Drapich then excused himself at a press conference at Beit Vagan that: "Omar is not in the best shape, we have a wide staff and he can function without him."

At that time Drapich became a joke among fans, his players and the media.

Only after a long media lynch, Drapitz decided to become an independent coach, to ignore Tabib for a moment, and decided that Noble would be in the Betar squad against Maccabi Tel Aviv.

He knew where he was going.

Slobodan Drapic (Photo: Maor Elkelsi)

But Drapich is not alone.

He is part of the phenomenon in which the 'coach status' was lost.

For years coaches have complained about the difficult work environment they face, many of them complain about the difficulty of surviving a long time in one team, but everyone, really everyone, is afraid to face the real problem - the team owners' much involvement in professional matters, and escaping responsibility.



With all due respect to the style of the team owners, their involvement and their mouth, those who have destroyed and continue to destroy the status of the coach are the coaches themselves.

They are frustrated with the conduct of the owners, they always, but will always run away from responsibility, they will look for who to bring down their failure.

Sometimes they will brief newspapers against players who have failed, sometimes they will provide some scoop to soften the criticism against them, and there are those who will not be ashamed to express themselves after any loss on short staff, on distress they have in a team with key players, as if there was a position in modern football. key.

And in the event of a loss, they will lament over a blow of injuries that prevented them from making an ideal composition for the game.



And if you ask them, they will tell you that their profession is the hardest thing in the world, that they live from week to week, their future depends on a striker's goal or a player's mistake, many of them believe their future and livelihood depends on referees.

Football coaches in the Premier League, by their nature, are whiny.

They always make excuses for losses, failures, they have become the most whiny sector there is in the job market.



Do you know the coaches who after a loss use the referee as an excuse for a loss?

They truly believe that most of the losses were only due to misjudgment.

Sharon Mimar, for example, is a champion at this.

Nir Klinger, too.

There are those, Yossi Aboksis for example, who do it in style: "I will not talk about the refereeing, but only say that the referee killed us today. We lost the game due to a refereeing error."

The easiest, the simplest.

There are weeping coaches, there are those who have reached the rank of weeping rabbi.

Coaches are never to blame.

They are geniuses.

God forbid they are never wrong.

Crying and playing the game of chairs.

Roni Levy (Photo: Berni Ardov)

Many coaches are frustrated by the owners of the team in which they work.

Every coach who worked for Moshe Hogg did not stop grumbling, every coach who worked for Shretzky begged the name Izzy Shretzky not to appear on the phone, Nir Klinger had a sea of ​​complaints to the owner of Hapoel Tel Aviv, not to mention the coaches who worked for Yoav Katz.

Ask Roni Levy (not to quote) what he thinks of Alona Barkat's silence regarding the fans' behavior towards him.

Ask him out well if he is no longer absorbed in the connection.



Everyone is crying and playing the game of chairs.

A moment here a moment there.

They have no moment to wave.

A moment before they were in one team, a moment after they are in another team, and so they skip from team to team, one moment in a hurry to say goodbye to the players they had to leave, and a moment later in a hurry to transfer training in the team against which they played the night before.

And they have endless explanations.

livelihood.

After all, there is a mortgage and you have to make a living, they really believe that this worn-out statement works on someone.

And there are those who are quick to respond again to the call of the one who fired them recently.

The one who abused and insulted them.

Well, there is a mortgage to pay.



Sheretzky's remarks about Drapich this week were embarrassing and unnecessary, but with all due respect to the style of Sheretzky and his teammates (who are less and who is more), many of the coaches acquired it thanks.

Those who are to blame for turning the coaches of the Premier League into the kind of carpet that can be stepped on, are the coaches themselves.

Do you think that Sheretsky, Hogg, Nisnov and others were able to enter the locker room or pass a note to Shlomo Sharaf, Giora Spiegel, Dror Kashtan, Eli Cohen the Sheriff and Eli Gutman?

Never.

And those coaches also had to pay a mortgage.

  • sport

  • Israeli soccer

  • Super League

Tags

  • Izzy Shretzky

  • Slobodan Drapic

Source: walla

All sports articles on 2022-02-18

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