Koren confident Slovenia can exorcise 2002 demons and spring a surprise

Captain convinced there will be no repeat of the embarrassments of their last World Cup appearance and has a warning for England

Richard Sydenham
Wednesday 05 May 2010 19:00 EDT
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Robert Koren remembers Slovenia's last World Cup finals appearance for dressing-room rows and their best player being sent home for abusing the coach. Eight years on, he is convinced it will be different.

The current side qualified via a shock play-off victory over Guus Hiddink's Russia. They also finished above the highly regarded Czech Republic and Poland in the qualifying group, conceding just four goals in 10 games and beat the group winners Slovakia home and away.

This feel-good factor is a far cry from 2002 when striker Zlatko Zahovic, the country's record goalscorer, had a heated dressing-room row with the then coach Srecko Katanec that led to his early flight home. Further, the team lost all their matches, to Spain, South Africa and Paraguay.

"It was a massive thing for our country and the national team, being in the World Cup," Koren said. "But some bad things happened.

"First of all we didn't get the right results, which was disappointing because we expected to get some points. The main thing was that there were some problems between the manager and the players and that is good for nobody. Now, it's completely different."

The 2010 Slovenia team is not in total harmony as there has been conflict with the football federation over reward payments but relations between players and management are apparently healthy. England, the United States and Algeria await them in the group phase.

Koren, whose West Bromwich Albion team won promotion to the Premier League this month, was taking a detour from his usual after- training routine in which – on a sunny day – he would visit a local park with his wife and two sons to kick a football.

Back home he enjoys playing tennis with friends. Dressed in a denim jacket, T-shirt, jeans and white trainers and approaching the end of a marathon two-hour barrage of questioning from the world's media, the Slovenia captain appeared relaxed with his side's current position, particularly after five wins in six matches.

The Slovenia story is no longer one to be embarrassed about, but proud of, Koren said, with the events of eight years ago rapidly becoming just a memory. "Nobody is thinking too much about what happened in 2002. We are playing a different style. Before we only had one star in the team [Zahovic]. But now we try to play more like a team and don't have one star.

"We are very good friends and have a good team spirit. You can't compare those two teams. We just want to show the people that we are good enough and get enough points to get through the group stage."

He added: "It's difficult to say what is realistic. A couple of months back, when we met Russia in the play-offs, everybody was saying we are the underdogs and will lose this game and Russia is in the World Cup – this was being said all over the world.

"But we are in the World Cup and we deserve that. We are full of confidence."

Koren's popularity with the media pre-World Cup has skyrocketed. An Albion spokesman revealed the Championship player would normally give maybe one interview to the local media every three weeks.

Now, requests from the US, Algeria and within the United Kingdom are having to be rejected. As Slovenia's captain, who has scored four goals in his 45 internationals, he accepts the media circus that goes with World Cup time.

"It's the biggest tournament you can achieve as a player in the national team. I always try to enjoy such things," Koren said.

"Everybody is excited before a World Cup – the players and the media. You need to tell them how you feel, what you think, because they are trying to get information. I see all this as a positive."

He was even in a mood to jest. When asked who was the Wayne Rooney or Cristiano Ronaldo of the Slovenia team, he grinned and pointed at himself, before denying his gesture with a laugh. This was a final chance to underline the team ethic in the Slovenian squad, minus any superstars.

"It's not as though just one player is doing a massive thing," he said. "We are such a small country, we know we all need to work hard together to win something. This [attitude] is why we are going to the World Cup. Not because one player was amazing. Everybody has done his job."

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