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Uzbekistan: They'll Be Doing The Samba In Tashkent

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  • Uzbekistan: They'll Be Doing The Samba In Tashkent

    UZBEKISTAN: THEY'LL BE DOING THE SAMBA IN TASHKENT
    Deirdre Tynan

    Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org
    June 10, 2009

    After months of intensive negotiations, legendary Brazilian football
    coach Luiz Felipe Scolari is being unveiled as the new manager of
    Uzbekistan's richest football club, Bunyodkor.

    Bunyodkor is owned by Miradil Djalalov, the managing director
    of Zeromax, a Swiss-registered company with extensive assets in
    Uzbekistan. The club would seem to be an unlikely new home for a man
    who led the Brazilian national team to World Cup glory in 2002. Yet,
    according to local media reports on June 10, the Brazilian coach
    reportedly inked an 18-month deal. Financial terms weren't immediately
    revealed.

    The 60-year-old Scolari will be coaching a host of aging world-class
    players who have signed lucrative contracts with the Uzbek league
    champion. "Uzbek football now creates its own success story, especially
    Bunyodkor with its remarkable dynamism," Scolari said in remarks
    published on Bunyodkor's website.

    Few people in Tashkent doubt that Bunyodkor has lots of money to
    throw around as it tries to cement a winning reputation by giving
    past-their-prime stars one last big payday.

    Zeromax, which has been linked in press reports to Gulnara Karimova,
    President Islam Karimov's daughter, has poured millions of dollars
    into both the team and club holdings. Samuel Eto'o, a striker for
    Spanish super club Barcelona, was reportedly offered a short-term
    contract worth $25 million to play at Bunyodkor for just three
    months. He refused, but Barcelona has partnered with Bunyodkor and
    will be paid a reported $5 million for an exhibition match in Tashkent
    later this year.

    Rivaldo, 37, a Brazilian soccer star who was a member of Scolari's
    World Cup-winning team, earns $131,370 per week at the Uzbek club
    as part of his four-year contract, the British Daily Mail newspaper
    has reported.

    Bunyodkor is in a position to take advantage of a huge tax break
    extended to Uzbek football clubs in April of this year. The tax
    exemption covers "customs fees (except fees for customs

    clearance) on imported goods, equipment and materials not produced
    in the country [that are] necessary for reconstruction of stadiums
    and strengthening the material-technical base of football clubs," and
    "all types of taxes and charges," except for social insurance payments.

    Work is currently ongoing on a 35,000-seat stadium in Tashkent. The
    estimated construction cost approaches $150 million.

    "Completion of a new football stadium in . . .Tashkent, which is
    scheduled for March 2010, will open a new era for the club. I know
    that I am in the right place at the right time and in the right team,"
    Scolari told the team's website.

    Although details of Scolari's financial package have yet to be
    revealed, John Duerden, Asia editor at the global football site
    www.goal.com, said it is likely be very, very large.

    "As a rule, the more unfashionable the place is, the more money it
    takes. There is no doubt that the Uzbek league is a step down from
    England [where Scolari last coached]. But there is a long list of
    big-name players and coaches going to unfashionable clubs for big
    money. Scolari won't be the last," Duerden told EurasiaNet on June 10.

    "Little is known about Uzbekistan in Europe and the assumption will
    be that the standard is low," Duerden continued. "But people move
    for money all the time in football."

    Duerden also said the Brazilian connection at the Uzbek club made
    sense. "Sometimes [developing football countries] choose to benchmark
    leading nations and Brazil is seen as the best, though others follow
    the German or Dutch model," he said. "It also makes sense from a
    practical point of view -- language, helps new guys to settle and
    so on."

    Scolari has a track record for turning little known squads into big
    winners, but Duerden cautions there may be only so far Bunyodkor
    can go.

    "How far they can go is limited to Uzbekistan, where they are already
    champions, and the Asian Champions League," he said. "It [the league]
    is not the most prestigious in the world, but it does grant entry to
    FIFA's annual Club World Cup. That could be the limit -- a chance to
    be seen on the world stage."

    "Bunyodkor could become the biggest club in Asia -- and Scolari will
    help with that -- but it is hard to say how big they will become in
    global terms," Duerden said.

    Editor's Note: Deirdre Tynan is a EurasiaNet correspondent in Bishkek.
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