Let's stub out Bilic fire: Frank Lampard plans to ambush his old pal Slaven
When Frank Lampard made his West Ham debut, there was Slaven Bilic,
having a crafty cigarette before kick-off and generally oozing
charisma.
When England hit their lowest ebb in years, he
was there again, bouncing around the Wembley touchline in his suit and
beanie hat.
Lighting up: Slaven Bilic has proved a highly popular coach among the Croatian players
Now he is back, scheduled to breeze through Heathrow at lunchtime
today (Tuesday) carrying plans to derail Fabio Capello side's faultless
procession to the World Cup finals.
Lampard chuckles when
popular, guitar-playing charmer Bilic is billed as some kind of evil
saboteur. But, since the last World Cup in Germany, the Croatia boss
has been an eye-witness to England's fall and rise.
From
the embarrassment of the Maksimir Stadium in 2006 to the rain-soaked
agony of Wembley 2007 and last year's revenge in Zagreb, inspired by
Theo Walcott.
'The thing I remember about Slaven from West
Ham was the size of his personality,' said Lampard, the only one of
tomorrow's likely England team to have played in all three previous
matches against Bilic's Croatia.
'To come from abroad and make the impression he did, both on the pitch and behind the scenes, shows his intelligence.
Bad memories: Frank Lampard was part of the
England team that lost to Bilic's Croatia on that fateful night at
Wembley two years ago
'He'd have a few fags before games. He was a smoker at the time, a
couple of other players did as well, but it didn't affect his
performance when he played. He was a cult hero, a nice fella and a top
player.'
Bilic spent just 18 months at West Ham before
moving to Everton but took Lampard and Rio Ferdinand under his wing as
they broke into the first team.
'I can see players would
like to work with him,' Lampard said. 'Whenever I hear him speak, he
talks about his close relationship with his players, as if they are
family. It's important for the modern-day manager to have that
relationship. The players then give you that bit extra.'
Bilic,
41, is an Anglophile who loved his time in the Barclays Premier League
and hopes to return to manage in it one day, but that will not stop him
making mischief ahead of tomorrow's qualifier at Wembley, when a win
would secure England's place in the World Cup finals.
But
he has a dark side too. After Croatia squeezed past Belarus with a win
on Saturday, he accused England of losing their fighting spirit under
Capello and suggested England skipper John Terry should look at his
Chelsea team-mates rather than lecture Croatia striker Eduardo on
diving.
This is the same Bilic who exaggerated the tiniest
contact of a head-butt from Laurent Blanc in a World Cup semi-final to
get the France defender sent off and banned from the 1998 final in
Paris.
'It might be reverse psychology,' said Lampard as he
digested Bilic's comments on spirit. 'He's very intelligent, almost in
the way Jose Mourinho was as a manager at Chelsea, always thinking one
step ahead and thinking of any little edge he can get on the other
team.
'It's just a few words before the game, maybe to fire
up his team. That's good management. The important thing for us is not
to get sucked in by it.'
Happy memories: Lampard has a laugh while recalling his days together with Bilic at West Ham
England should be flattered if they have minimised their reliance on
their bulldog spirit. Pride, passion and an English manager did not
help much two years ago, when Croatia stopped Steve McClaren's team
qualifying for Euro 2008.
'That was a low point in all our
careers and England's recent football history,' admits Lampard, who is
close to a decade of service for his country. 'There was a team of good
individuals but low confidence.'
Lampard stepped forward
that night to score his first penalty for his country since missing in
the World Cup quarter-final shootout against Portugal. It eased some of
the ferocious criticism he suffered from England fans but was
ultimately forgotten as Croatia won 3-2.
'They knocked us
out of the Euros and we all felt that as a nation,' said the Chelsea
midfielder, on target again from the spot against Slovenia on Saturday
to make it four goals in six games for his country. 'But you'd be a
fool not to see the progress we've made since.
'I've never
known the team so confident going into games, wanting to win them and
waiting for the next game. We're not lacking spirit and we're calmer
these days as well. That can only be a positive thing.'
Seven
wins from seven qualifiers equals soaring morale but Capello let his
players know he was far from impressed after they beat Slovenia.
'He
wasn't totally happy. I don't think he ever is,' said Lampard. 'You can
see he's a perfectionist by the way he works and that's why he's had
the success he's had. If we make a fantastic performance, there will be
a video a few days later showing certain aspects where we could have
been better.
'We all understand when we've made mistakes
but this isn't a time to pick on individuals. We know what the manager
is like and he's not going to accept it.'