Belgium Coach Martínez: At the World Cup we Need to Show we are Prepared to Suffer

Belgium coach Roberto Martinez and his assistant Thierry Henry. (AFP)
Belgium coach Roberto Martinez and his assistant Thierry Henry. (AFP)
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Belgium Coach Martínez: At the World Cup we Need to Show we are Prepared to Suffer

Belgium coach Roberto Martinez and his assistant Thierry Henry. (AFP)
Belgium coach Roberto Martinez and his assistant Thierry Henry. (AFP)

“Everyone remembers their first World Cup as their introduction to football,” Roberto Martínez says on an intriguing afternoon at Belgium’s training center in Tubize. We’re just a short drive from Brussels but a long way from Sochi where Belgium, whom Martínez has managed since August 2016, play their first game as one of the tournament favorites against Panama on Monday.

“I remember my first World Cup in 1982, when I was 10, starting a Panini collection with my dad and getting all the stickers and trying to understand as much as I could about the other nations,” Martínez tell the Guardian. “So to be involved in the tournament, as an international manager, means a great deal. But, just like then, football is all about the players. I have a fantastic group and I believe totally in them.”

Martínez is under intense pressure. He leads one of the most talented squads in Russia while his position is debated in Belgium, where the Spaniard has never quite been accepted. Yet his enthusiasm is unstinting, on a day where he gives up 80 minutes to engage so fully with this interview it is hard to think of another World Cup manager who would be as generous.

Some have suggested that, considering the excellence of his squad, anything less than topping a group which includes England and Tunisia and reaching at least the semi-finals should be considered a failure. Martínez is too cute to make any predictions but he exudes a breezy confidence. “Failure is not trying to win,” he says airily before outlining his challenges in more precise detail. “We’re going to be adventurous and brave. We’re going to try and win every game. But the feelings you develop in the three group games are essential.

“We’ve got the talent but, clearly, a country like Germany already has the belief. When you speak with ex-players from Germany they tell you that when they pulled on the shirt they had no doubt they would win. That psychology is powerful in knock-out tournaments. We need to show that mentality and I believe we will because our attitude and talent is very good.”

Belgium’s record under Martínez looks impressive. They have played 18 matches, losing only once, and they were the first European country to qualify for the World Cup from an easy group. “We have only lost my first game, the friendly against Spain, and since then the players showed incredible focus. Spain was a very interesting game because sacked Julen Lopetegui took over as their manager at a similar time. That was both our first game in charge. It was similar when he took over Porto and we faced each other in a friendly at Everton.

“Spain are in a very good moment. They’ve got a really good mixture of players that already know what it means to win a major tournament and younger players that have played in this style the last 10 years. From that point we learned a lot tactically and adjusted. We are ready to compete against teams like Spain.” It remains to be seen how far Spain can progress in the World Cup given Lopetegui’s shcok dismissal on the eve of the tournament.

One of Belgium’s star players, Kevin De Bruyne, challenged Martínez last November. After Belgium drew with Mexico, De Bruyne said they had been outwitted and, despite the 3-3 scoreline, Martínez had used an excessively defensive 5-3-2 formation. “Mexico were tactically better,” De Bruyne said. “As long as there is no good tactical system we face difficulties. It’s a pity we have not yet found a solution. We are playing a very defensive system, but our team is filled with many attacking players.”

“We don’t normally play 5-3-2,” Martínez explains, “but we want to be flexible. The system we used most was 3-4-3 as it helps the front players we have with Kevin, Eden Hazard, Dries Mertens and Romelu Lukaku. It was good in qualifying but we tried other systems in friendlies. Mexico were fantastic tactically and gave us a really good exercise.”

Some coaches might bristle when an outstanding player is openly critical but Martínez turns those misgivings into praise. “Kevin showed how much he cares. The reason for talking was totally honest and healthy. There is a culture here of trying to understand things from a tactical point of view, which I like. I’m not asking every player to give their view in public but Kevin said it in a way of wanting us to improve. He is growing into a big leadership role.

“The 3-4-3 system helped Chelsea win the Premier League last year and I used it with Wigan in 2009. But the system is just a starting position. I’m more interested in the way we play and our mentality. At the World Cup we need to show that we are prepared to suffer – and face adversity. This group do not have a previous generation to show them how to win a major tournament. So it’s almost going into the unknown and we need to be very focused.”

Portugal are the only other team from Martínez’s first 18 matches to harbor serious World Cup ambitions and they drew 0-0 in Brussels this month. Belgium were more impressive last week when brushing aside Egypt 3-0. But, rather than lamenting a lack of serious opposition, Martínez highlights the distinct character of a 23-man squad in which only one player, Leander Dendoncker from Anderlecht, is based in Belgium.

“In this dressing room the players understand what it means to play for the Red Devils,” Martínez says, using a nickname he loves for his team. “It’s different to any other country in Europe because normally you don’t get this situation where 95 percent of the squad play abroad. When they come back they care about the national team.”

Martínez points out that, until he moved to Belgium, he had spent exactly 21 years each in Spain and Britain – having lived almost his entire adult life in the UK as a player and then as a manager for Wigan, Swansea, Motherwell, Walsall, Chester and Everton. Has his unusual past helped him in Belgium? “I think so. I first moved out of my comfort zone at 16 to play for Real Zaragoza. To go from there at 21 to Wigan was like going to the moon.

“These different experiences were valuable when later managing a very diverse Premier League dressing room. Diversity is very important in the Belgium dressing room so it feels natural.”

Having lived in England for so long, Martínez knows that “golden generation” is a loaded term. Yet it is often applied to a group of Belgian players including De Bruyne, Hazard, Thibaut Courtois, Vincent Kompany, Jan Vertonghen, Mousa Dembélé, Lukaku and Mertens. “When people talk of Belgium’s golden generation it doesn’t bother me. It’s a media term but there’s nothing wrong in highlighting this group’s quality. It’s more important you find a winning mentality from inside the group and they deal with adversity – because you’ll face that in a major tournament.”

Martínez will need to overcome any psychological barriers that have affected Belgium in recent tournaments – most recently when Wales knocked them out in the quarter-finals of Euro 2016. The appointment of Thierry Henry as his assistant has helped. Henry was part of a transformative French squad which won the 1998 World Cup and Euro 2000 after decades of disappointment.

Belgium play England in their final group game on June 28. In an understated way, Gareth Southgate has prepared England more effectively than many of his World Cup predecessors. “Absolutely. Gareth is a thinker. He has a clear vision and he has players he knows really well from his time in the under-21s. He’s created a team that looks as if it will enjoy the World Cup. We worked together on ITV during the Euros in Poland and Ukraine and we got on really well and share a similar outlook.”

There will be nerves for both managers when they meet in Kaliningrad but their earlier results against Panama and Tunisia will set the tone. “Panama just kept the United States out of the World Cup so they are national heroes. They’ve got incredible belief and are very competitive. And when you go into a World Cup with a feeling of celebration, you’ve got nothing to lose. Tunisia also have a strong team that has been together for a few years. They like to play but they know how to be solid. It’s a very good mixture and they qualified in style.”

Brazil, Germany, Spain and France are ahead of Belgium as World Cup favorites. Martínez grins. “And Argentina. They have Messi. Those five teams won the World Cup in modern times, in the last 22 years. They can look internally and get guidance from the generation that won it. You need that because, psychologically, to overcome the unknown is difficult. You can have good individuals but to reach that level you need to unlock something special.”

Criticized heavily in Belgium for excluding Radja Nainggolan, Martínez knows how lucky he is to have exceptional players.

“Kevin De Bruyne almost goes against the idea that we have of a playmaker who finds his own tempo and almost delays everything. Kevin’s the opposite. He’s the most dynamic playmaker. He can execute a pass with incredible precision but at a very quick tempo. Eden Hazard is a leader and he would never turn away from getting on the ball. He’s getting to a moment where everything is done with real purpose and quality. Dries Mertens has been brilliant at Napoli in his first season as a No 9. His appreciation of space and his intelligence makes him really efficient.”

Martínez managed Lukaku at Everton and the striker complained that they should play more direct football. “That was one comment in a 30-minute interview and you need to understand Romelu is obsessed with becoming the best he can be. That is a winning mentality. He was never disrespectful. So we have these strong personalities. Look at Vincent Kompany. We hope he is fit because his experience is so important and he knows how to face adversity. He’s had to cope with a lot and he keeps bouncing back. He is special.”

We talk for another 30 minutes as Martínez remembers the first football shirt he bought as a boy – Carlos “Lobo” Diarte’s No. 9 for Zaragoza – and his surreal early years as a Spaniard in Wigan. He also remembers his luck meeting his Scottish wife, Beth, during a brief spell at Motherwell and how, amid an absorption in the football philosophy of Johan Cruyff, he became close to Cruyff’s son. Jordi Cruyff was best man at his wedding on a beautiful day in Wales. Martínez jokes that his young daughter, Luella, might support England, the country of her birth, as we complete a photo session while opera booms out. “That’s Nacer Chadli,” Martínez says of the West Brom midfielder who is in his World Cup squad. “He loves opera.”

Martínez is at ease with these contrasts and, despite all those who doubt him, he could inspire Belgium in Russia. “These players carry the inspiration,” he insists. “We have so much diversity in Belgium but the Red Devils will bring everyone together.”

The Guardian Sport



Soccer Offers West Bank Palestinians an Escape as the World Cup Kicks Off

File: Palestinian players leave the field after an Asian Group B World Cup qualifying soccer match against Oman at the King Abdullah II Stadium in Amman, Jordan on June 12, 2025. (AP Photo/John Duerden)
File: Palestinian players leave the field after an Asian Group B World Cup qualifying soccer match against Oman at the King Abdullah II Stadium in Amman, Jordan on June 12, 2025. (AP Photo/John Duerden)
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Soccer Offers West Bank Palestinians an Escape as the World Cup Kicks Off

File: Palestinian players leave the field after an Asian Group B World Cup qualifying soccer match against Oman at the King Abdullah II Stadium in Amman, Jordan on June 12, 2025. (AP Photo/John Duerden)
File: Palestinian players leave the field after an Asian Group B World Cup qualifying soccer match against Oman at the King Abdullah II Stadium in Amman, Jordan on June 12, 2025. (AP Photo/John Duerden)

As the FIFA World Cup gets underway on June 11, with Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Qatar and Saudi Arabia among the Arab nations set to compete, soccer remains both a passion and a struggle for many Palestinians in the Israeli- occupied West Bank.

The Palestinian national team came agonizingly close to qualifying for the tournament but fell just short of reaching the 48-team field. Still, the World Cup will be closely watched in the West Bank, where, for many young Palestinians, the game offers both an escape from daily pressures and the realities that surround them.

In the Bedouin village of Umm al-Khair, in the Masafer Yatta region south of Hebron, children play on a small soccer pitch bordered by barbed wire erected by Israeli settlers from the nearby Carmel settlement. During a recent game, a ball kicked toward the goal landed beyond the fence as young settlers passed by. The settlers took the ball away, ending the match.

Residents say such incidents are common. The community has lost dozens of soccer balls. Attempting to retrieve them can risk confrontation with settlers and, at times, Israeli soldiers.

Further north, in Nablus, children and teenagers from a local soccer academy train on a municipal stadium pitch that has fallen into disrepair. Along the sidelines, Palestinians from Gaza who held permits to work in Israel before the war watch the sessions as they hang clothes to dry. Stranded in the West Bank since the war broke out in October 2023, many have created makeshift homes in the stadium’s locker rooms, the facility's manager says, fearing they could be forced to return to Gaza.

The Palestinian Football Federation has halted league matches throughout the war, citing the precarious security situation in the West Bank, where the Israeli military frequently conducts arrest raids and has erected scores of checkpoints. Once-rowdy soccer stadiums are largely empty, with some neglected.

At Faisal Al-Husseini International Stadium in Al-Ram, home to the Palestinian national team, amateur players gather for training sessions. In Tulkarem, young players, some wearing national team jerseys, do the same. FIFA offered some funding to the Palestinian Football Association, but moved the national team's “home” matches to other countries, including Jordan, Qatar and Malaysia, due to security concerns.

In the absence of regular league play, training sessions have become one of the few remaining spaces for exercise, social interaction and a sense of normality.

As the world’s attention turns toward soccer’s biggest tournament, the game continues to provide moments of community, resilience and hope for Palestinians across the West Bank.


Adidas, Real Madrid Extend Partnership for 8 Years

FILE PHOTO: An Adidas logo is seen at the new Futurecraft shoe unveiling event in New York City, New York, US April 6, 2017. REUTERS/Joe Penney/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: An Adidas logo is seen at the new Futurecraft shoe unveiling event in New York City, New York, US April 6, 2017. REUTERS/Joe Penney/File Photo
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Adidas, Real Madrid Extend Partnership for 8 Years

FILE PHOTO: An Adidas logo is seen at the new Futurecraft shoe unveiling event in New York City, New York, US April 6, 2017. REUTERS/Joe Penney/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: An Adidas logo is seen at the new Futurecraft shoe unveiling event in New York City, New York, US April 6, 2017. REUTERS/Joe Penney/File Photo

Germany's Adidas said on Wednesday it signed ⁠an eight-year ⁠extension ⁠of its sponsoring partnership with Real Madrid, covering soccer and basketball.

“First formalized in 1980 and then re-established after a short break from the 1998/1999 season, the Adidas and Real Madrid partnership has seen the club become the most successful on the European stage, delivering eight UEFA MEN’S CHAMPIONS LEAGUE™ trophies in this period while wearing the Three Stripes,” it said in a statement.

“From best-in-class technical performance wear that has supported athletes like Zinedine Zidane, Toni Kroos, David Beckham and Jude Bellingham on the field of play, to culture-wear that enables fans to carry their support through all parts of life, the partnership has created some of the game’s most famous sportswear,” it added.

“The new agreement follows shortly after the release of the new Real Madrid Home jersey, a design that brings the finer details of the club’s crest to the fore with deep green and bold pink details,” the statement said.

“The strategic alliance between Real Madrid and Adidas has helped us, over these three decades, to experience one of the most wonderful periods in our history. It has also enabled us to continue nurturing this universal feeling known as madridismo,” the statement quoted Florentino Pérez, president of Real Madrid, as saying.

Adidas CEO Bjørn Gulden expressed pride that “the Three Stripes will continue to be part of this extraordinary success story.”


Somali Referee Says World Cup ‘Dream’ Ruined

Somalian referee Omar Abdulkadir Artan gestures during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) 2024 group D football match between Mauritania and Algeria at Stade de la Paix in Bouake on January 23, 2024. (AFP)
Somalian referee Omar Abdulkadir Artan gestures during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) 2024 group D football match between Mauritania and Algeria at Stade de la Paix in Bouake on January 23, 2024. (AFP)
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Somali Referee Says World Cup ‘Dream’ Ruined

Somalian referee Omar Abdulkadir Artan gestures during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) 2024 group D football match between Mauritania and Algeria at Stade de la Paix in Bouake on January 23, 2024. (AFP)
Somalian referee Omar Abdulkadir Artan gestures during the Africa Cup of Nations (CAN) 2024 group D football match between Mauritania and Algeria at Stade de la Paix in Bouake on January 23, 2024. (AFP)

Somali referee Omar Artan said the "biggest dream of my life" had been ripped away after he was denied entry to the United States to officiate at the World Cup.

Artan, who was named referee of the year in 2025 by the Confederation of African Football, has been dropped from FIFA's list of officials after he was refused entry to the United States on arriving in Miami on Saturday.

Somalia is one of several countries on a travel ban list introduced by President Donald Trump's administration as part of a broader immigration crackdown.

A US State Department official told AFP late Tuesday that the referee was "associated with suspected members of terrorist organizations," therefore "making the traveler ineligible for admission to the United States."

After an 11-hour interview with border officials, Artan said he was taken to a separate holding cell where he was detained for several further hours before being put on a flight back to Istanbul.

"I'm just simply a referee who's trying to live his dream, the biggest dream of my life, to come to the World Cup," Artan told the New York Times on Tuesday in a telephone interview from the Turkish city.

"I had the right papers and everything. I had the right visa," he added.

FIFA said it was powerless to influence the decision, which it said was the sole preserve of tournament co-hosts the United States.

"In line with previous FIFA events, a host government ultimately determines who receives a visa and who is admitted into their country," said a spokesperson for football's governing body.

A spokesperson for US Customs and Border Protection said Artan was denied entry following a routine inspection.

"Following inspection, the traveler, a referee for the FIFA World Cup, was determined to be inadmissible due to vetting concerns and was denied entry," the statement said.

The Somali government expressed "deep regret" at Artan's exclusion from the tournament.

"Artan represents the very best of Somali talent," the sports ministry said.

The largest World Cup in history begins on Thursday, shrouded in political tension.

Iran, who will play their three group games on American soil, were forced to switch their training base to Mexico due to the military conflict between Tehran and the US.

The Iranian football federation on Tuesday said its allocation of tickets for supporters had been revoked, while some of the team's support staff have been denied visas.