Better late than never, World Cup beckons for Gareca
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[November 16, 2017]
By Andrew Downie
SAO PAULO, Nov 16 (Reuters) - Coach
Ricardo Gareca guided Peru to a long-awaited World Cup finals
appearance on Wednesday and in doing so moved a step closer to
fulfilling his own dream of gracing soccer's greatest tournament.
Gareca, whose side beat New Zealand 2-0 in Lima to qualify by the
same score on aggregate via an inter-confederation playoff, was
cruelly denied the chance to take part in the 1986 World Cup finals
as a player for eventual champions Argentina.
In 1985, the then striker scored the goal that guaranteed his home
nation their place in Mexico, ironically against Peru, the team he
would come to manage three decades later.
However, Gareca did not make the final squad that, thanks largely to
Diego Maradona's guile and brilliance, would lift the title at the
Aztec Stadium. He was dropped, an experience he later described as
one of the most bitter of his career.
Now, the man known as 'The Tiger' can look forward to a summer in
Russia, with a team he has patiently built back to something
resembling its best.
"Mission accomplished, thank you," Gareca said after goals from
Jefferson Farfan and Christian Ramos gave Peru a historic victory.
"We have managed something very important for the country. I am very
emotional."
After coaching a slew of South American clubs, Gareca was hired as
Peru manager in 2015 with the express task of taking a national side
that contained plenty of talent but few big names back to the finals
for the first time since 1982.
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His two-and-a-half years in charge started inconsistently and some
Peruvians, unwilling to forget his decisive goal in 1985, were quick
to call for his head.
"It was a complicated start," Gareca admitted. "You always need a
bit of luck. I am a person who believes in luck, although I believe
in work above all."
He led Peru to the semi-finals of the 2015 Copa America but they
struggled in the early World Cup qualifiers, winning just one of
their first six fixtures.
However, they were given a huge boost in September last year when in
their seventh match, Bolivia fielded an illegal player and the 2-0
defeat was overturned into a 3-0 victory by a sporting tribunal.
The decision sparked a run of form that lifted the Andean nation up
to fifth place in the South American qualifying table, guaranteeing
them a playoff spot against New Zealand.
Both goals in the tie came in Lima on Wednesday and extended the
side's unbeaten run to 10 games, the longest any Peru team has run
up in 75 years.
Gareca will hope the run can continue and that in Russia, he can
finally show the world what they were missing. (Additional reporting
by Marco Aquino; Editing by John O'Brien)
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