<...>[Romeo Jozak, a man who, over the past 25 years, has held almost every significant role in Croatian football] — heading Dinamo Zagreb’s academy and becoming technical director of the Croatian FA, before returning to Dinamo as their sporting chief. Arsenal noticed — attempting to hire him as academy director in 2013 after the retirement of the legendary Liam Brady. But Jozak opted to remain in Croatia, where he had worked his way up from coaching Dinamo’s under-11s to literally writing the nation’s player development manual.
<...>“And I can ask the same question back — why have Serbia done so much better in basketball than us? We’ve struggled since Drazen Petrovic’s time in the 1990s. But I think the answer is the same — from 2000 onwards, we’ve had a clear structure of football governance and strategy in the country.”
<...>“In terms of having players who could impact the national team, one huge criterion is internal competition,” explains Jozak. “Never mind 11 — if you have 20 players in a squad fighting against each other on a daily basis, they have to improve to survive. So we wanted to bring the best talent to Dinamo to create the most competitive internal competition against each other. And when it was not sufficient to play against the other Croatian teams, we would put them in to play against the higher age groups — the under-16s against the under-18s, the under-18s would play the under-20s, and so on. We artificially created these conditions.
<...>“But we always tried to push them towards the middle. It would improve your reactions, positioning, tactics, mentality… you’d physically be running the most. And then, even if you aren’t good enough to play central midfield professionally, you will probably be good enough for your primary position.”
<...>“You have to understand — there’s three and a half million of us <>We have some talent, but we don’t have a huge pool of talent, right? So when we see a fragile talent — a talent that might not reach its full potential if it’s not cherished — we have to nourish it. We had a tolerance for their mistakes. <>We had to look after them. This is what we had.”
<...>“Once, at Dinamo Zagreb, we had open tryouts. Kids came from across the whole of the Balkans. We had 25 of the most talented boys, they all came onto the pitch, and when the coach asked where they played, 24 of them said they were midfielders.”
<...>After moving leaving Dinamo to become technical director of the Croatian FA in 2013, Jozak impressed the importance of five criteria in becoming an elite side:
- Producing a high quantity of young talent
- Employing a high-quality coach
- Establishing a replicable programme across the academy age groups
- Manufacturing a high level of internal competition
- Challenging the best talent with external competition
To this end, he literally wrote the country’s coaching manual — identifying over 100 technical traits for coaches to spot and develop. <>Jozak is now working for the Saudi Arabian FA as technical director of the Future Falcons, a national project to produce a squad of outstanding domestic players for the 2034 World Cup.