Pjanjic at the BiH FA
Bosnia & Herzegovina 2-1 Romania (26:03:11)
Celik Zenica 1-0 Olimpik Sarajevo (30:03:11)
Possibly not for the first time, the wishes of UEFA and FIFA differ to that of another organising body. Nick Ames explains why they're in conflict with some Bosnia & Herzegovina FA delegates, and enjoys a couple of football matches into the bargain...
Widened hands at the ready, the local media prepare to applaud Safet Susic into the press conference room. He deserves it – not especially known for gamechanging from the sideline, his second-half sleights of hand have stirred up the momentum to finally see off an insipid Romania at Bilino Polje and give Bosnia & Herzegovina (BiH) a fighting chance of achieving what they couldn’t quite manage in the last qualification tournament they entered.
The door swings open, but Susic isn’t there – not yet. Mircea Sandu, the Romanian representative on UEFA’s executive committee, sits down in front of a surprised press pack, all gleaming grey hair and fixed bonhomie. The cordial oozing of imminent danger chimes of dinner with a Bond villain. A harsher light is immediately set upon the chaotic celebrations that had taken place not half an hour previously. Sandu congratulates BiH on their deserved win against the nation he represented 18 times. He wishes them the very best of fortune in their qualifying campaign, and wills that this extends to the wider health of football in the country. However, he dearly hopes that the FA will shortly agree to align with UEFA and FIFA’s statutes on leadership in order that it avoids the international suspension that would otherwise be likely. It would be a shame if the national side’s progress counted for nothing, wouldn’t it, and that the two teams couldn’t meet again later in the year? He ups, leaves, mindful of the impact his speech has had on a room hitherto filled with positive potential energy. Susic finally takes his place, even though you half expect him to fall into a piranha-infested pool en route. The mood lightens again, even if analysis of the game itself has been set into discomfiting context.
Forty-five minutes before kick-off, Bilino Polje had been packed to the rafters. You forget that things can still be like this in Europe; you consider genuine pre-match spectacles no longer to be within your reach or even your ken. The tannoy had been leading with the usual selection of rousing local anthems for a good hour prior, too, but suddenly it had stopped and – to a man – the crowd behind the left-sided goal had raised arms and flags in the air and begun chanting loudly, angrily. “Is it about the FA?” I ask Sasa, sitting beside me. “Yes, the FA”, he replies. “They’re calling for them to stand down, to change and let BiH play football. If they don’t, it might be game over.”
What a time to walk headlong into such a chaotic, bewildering narrative. Earlier that morning, Sarajevo had been sunny – waking up slowly, as it does, to the sound of pigeons and mosques and chatter over thick coffee. Slowly, flags would be unfurled and draped outside bars, flatscreen televisions being brought out to join them. Men wearing full national team tracksuits would take up position by racks of knock-off Manchester City shirts. Football-themed flags, and even pens, would be hawked all along Ferhadija. There’s a game on, that much soon becomes apparent, but it won’t be here. Sasa picks me up just after lunch, his brother and tracksuit-clad father in tow. They’ve come from Mostar but we’re heading to Zenica – located in a deeply working-class region 90 minutes north, it fashions itself as Bosnia’s Steel City and its aesthetics are accordingly uncompromising. Bilino Polje only seats around 15,000 but the atmosphere engendered by the locals, as well as the lack of a running track around the pitch, draws favour from the powers that be – the national team rarely loses there, the location’s intensity almost certainly being a decisive factor.
The local shopkeepers were feeling shirty
In the car, I swot up. The situation cuts two ways: BiH need to defeat Romania to put genuine pressure on Belarus for second place in their Euro 2012 group and to all but see off Razvan Lucescu’s men. After that, they need to defeat themselves. In three days’ time, the FA will vote to decide whether to replace their current leadership – an ethnic Bosnian, Serb and Croat triumvirate – with a single figurehead in line with FIFA’s stipulation. Opt against, and their current stay of execution will expire. The international ban will kick in for clubs and, probably, country from April 1 and the consequences could be wider ranging – and more damaging - than this column will allow.
Outside Bilino Polje, which is certainly the most ‘English’ of Bosnia’s stadia, everyone’s up for the first of these battles. Several hundred fans, all wearing dark blue hoodies bearing the legend ‘Hardcore Bosnians On Tour’ make a dramatic, synchronised march towards the ground. It’s peaceful, but inside the stadium they’ll have a fenced-off corner all to themselves. The navy mass will, placed opposite the open end full of colour and vim, look a brooding and sinister presence. It has its own repertoire of chants and flares, and will prove a curious sideshow for the entire evening.
Hardcore Bosnians On Tour
We have coffee outside the ground, exchanging stories and observations. A who’s who of Bosnian football seeps past – a Velez Mostar captain here, a Celik Zenica chairman there – all mixed in among the support. There don’t really seem to be any divides, any social strata, once you’re here. The sense of common cause, of pride in what is still a new nation, is strong.
BiH, already welcomed ear-splittingly when Emir Spahic leds his side out to warm up, begin the game to noise befitting a support of five times the volume. The relentlessness is stirring, quite special, and mirrored by Susic’s side, which begins at remarkable pace. Edin Dzeko and Vedad Ibisevic work the channels tirelessly, Miralem Pjanjic and Zvezdjan Misimovic cutting in from wide to infiltrate the spaces they vacate. It’s a whirlwind of activity but, save for a Misimovic effort that fools one side of the stadium into a celebration and a Dzeko shot that’s pushed away, the unambitious Romanians survive without too many close scrapes.
Then, naturally, the visitors score. Ciprian Marica, playing just ahead of Adrian Mutu, chests down a deflected Razvan Rat cross and volleys home sharply. It’s undeserved, but impressive – and the small pocket of Romanian fans celebrate in the far corner with flares and bared backsides, to the chagrin of the grim mass of navy blue on the other side of the goal. The hosts’ fire is dampened; a Pjanjic free-kick is well saved, but the rest of the first half passes in a fug of rotational Romanian fouling and misplaced Bosnian passes. This may be, but the Zenica faithful are yet to quieten down for a second.
Despite their lead, Romania have shown no ability to retain possession and little genuine evidence that they won’t crack under coherent attack. But they’ve just started to gain a small grip on the second half, with Gabriel Torje showing flickers to suggest his rising stature, when Misimovic swings in a free-kick and – not for the last time in the evening – their defence stands rooted. Ibisevic is not the only Bosnian primed for a free header, but he makes the ball ahead of Dzeko and glances into the far corner. Bilino Polje erupts, but the ball is spirited quickly back to the centre circle.
Misimovic sets up the equaliser
Dzeko's winner sends the crowd (and press box) wild
Panorama from the top row of the Bijeli Brijeg Stadium
It doesn’t deter me from returning to Zenica the following day. Bilino Polje is nowhere near as packed for Celik Zenica v Olimpik Sarajevo, but the crowd is still decent enough for the first leg of a cup semi-final. If the FA does not resolve its issues with FIFA and UEFA, the winners of this tournament will miss out on the benefits of next season’s Europa League – “nothing but a disaster; clubs will be destroyed”, a fellow onlooker tells me. Celik win 1-0, the industrial city’s support once more surpassing itself. There isn’t a single away fan; Olimpik have only been up and running since 1993 and are yet to gain a real foothold in the consciousness. The football itself spits and flickers; home left-back Emir Kuduzovic is the most impressive performer and lashes in the only goal, while promising young colleague Adin Dzafic, operating in an attacking left-sided position, shows some turns and touches that rise above the rest. It’d take a dedicated scout to be here. European football is one of the few ways in which a player from the Bosnian league can announce himself to any kind of broader audience; the sporting and economic consequences of being denied it go hand on hand with the talented professionals’ prospects of upward mobility.
Celik Zenica v Olimpik Sarajevo
Before leaving for London the next day, I read some newspapers. Pjanjic and other national team players haven’t held back – the FA are accused, from all corners, of betraying the country and its sport. It’s impossible to disagree, although it’s equally difficult to be fully aware of the far deeper-running motivations and fears that run behind the association’s need to divide power this way. Watching Susic’s richly gifted, if flawed, side it’s strange to conceive that the events in Zenica might all have been played out for very little. You suspect some kind of resolution will eventually be found, and deeply hope so; anyone who’s been to Bilino Polje will tell you that extraordinary places like this have to remain as relevant as ever.
Big thanks to Bosnian journalist Sasa Ibrulj for his help, and his company over beer, during my European Football Week (?) in BiH. Please follow him on Twitter - @sasaibrulj
You can also follow both Nick Ames and European Football Weekends on Twitter
Like this? Nick has also covered CFR Cluj for EFW.
Nick is a writer for Arsenal FC. He has his own blog: Last Seat on the Plane.
- Feel free to comment below -
3 comments:
Superb article, as a Bosnian living in the UK I have yet to expirience a real match in Bonisa, but I hope to do so soon. Fantastic coverage on an issue that is out of the media's eyes yet as important as any!
Cheers! I agree - it's a very complex situation that runs extremely deep, and I'd like to see it explored further in the English media.
Excellent article. Bosnia is a great area to explore for the sociology of Football. I think a follow up this article would be great
Post a Comment