Guus Hiddink (born 8 November 1946 in Varsseveld) is a Dutch football coach. He coached PSV Eindhoven between 2002-2006. Throughout his entire coaching career, he is best recognised for leading South Korea to a 4th place finish in the 2002 FIFA World Cup, coaching the Netherlands into the same position in the 1998 FIFA World Cup in France, leading Australia to the 2006 FIFA World Cup—their first appearance in the tournament for 32 years—and some impressive displays of PSV in the Champions League. Hiddink will coach the Russian national team after the 2006 World Cup.
He also had coaching stints at Turkish club Fenerbahçe in 1990 but was dismissed after only one year before joining Spanish giants Valencia. His outspoken nature was demonstrated when during a league game at Valencia's Mestalla stadium, he ordered a racist banner to be removed from one of the stands. His open attacking brand of football appealed to the Valencia team as well as to the rest of the Spanish Premier League.
His first year in charge was not met with favourable reviews from the Korean press, as he was often spotted together with his girlfriend, when some felt he should instead have been taking charge of the team. After a 2-1 loss to the US Gold Cup team in January 2002, he was criticized again for not taking his job seriously. Nevertheless, the team he assembled was a cohesive unit that consequently proved to be one of the fittest teams at the World Cup.
In the World Cup itself, the South Korean team achieved its first ever victory in the final stage (2-0, against Poland), and after a 1-1 draw with the USA and a further 1-0 victory against strongly-fancied Portugal, the South Korean team qualified for the second round, already realising the hopes of the Korean nation. The second round opponents were Italy, who were defeated 2-1 after extra time in a game which recalled North Korea's victory over Italy in the 1966 FIFA World Cup. The South Korea public then began to dream of a semi-final berth, which was attained on defeating Spain on penalties.See 2002 FIFA World Cup (match reports) for these two controversial victories. However, the South Korean team's run was halted by Germany in the semi-finals. As with the Netherlands team four years before in France, Hiddink led his team into fourth place after a defeat to Turkey in the third place playoff. For the South Korean populace, Hiddink had done a commendable job as football pundits had never expected success near approaching this scale.
Hiddink was given the unofficial title of the most popular individual in the country, and became the first-ever foreigner to be given honorary South Korean citizenship. In addition other rewards soon followed - a private villa in Jeju island; free flights for life with Korean Airlines and Asiana Airlines, free taxi rides, and so forth. The World Cup stadium in Gwangju was renamed Guus Hiddink Stadium in his honor shortly after the World Cup. His hometown, where a Guuseum was set up, became a popular stopover for South Koreans visiting the Netherlands.
In the play-offs held with Uruguay in Montevideo on 12 November and in Sydney on 16 November 2005, both home teams won 1-0. Australia went on to win 4-2 on penalties – the first time Australia had qualified for the finals in 32 years, and the first time that any team had qualified through winning a penalty shoot-out.
Hiddink has since taken on legendary status in Australia and is referred to affectionately as "Aussie Guus". Slogans for the Socceroos' World Cup campaign were "No Guus, No Glory" and "In Guus We Trust" as well as the play on words of the famous taunt "Guus your Daddy?". His reputation has only been enhanced by his remarkable transformation of the national side. Many pundits have remarked that his transformation of the defence has been particularly noteworthy, turning a team which conceded many goals under Frank Farina into a solid defensive unit which only conceded one goal away from home to both Uruguay and the Netherlands. Hiddink's assistants at Australia were Dutch legend Johan Neeskins and former Australian International Graham Arnold
The Socceroos defeated the Japanese team 3-1 during their first game in the 2006 FIFA World Cup Finals, with Tim Cahill scoring 2 goals (84', 89') and John Aloisi scoring 1 (92') all in the last eight minutes to claim their first World Cup goals and victory ever. An early controversial call by the Egyptian referee that awarded a goal to the Japanese team, despite an apparent foul to Australian goalkeeper Mark Schwarzer, had the Australians playing catch up until the last eight minutes. After scoring the first goal, Cahill was lucky to get away with a potential foul when he tripped Japan's Yuichi Komano who had dribbled into the Australian penalty area. The referee missed the incident, and Cahill then broke to score the second on the counter. FIFA's spokesman for refereeing Anderas Werz said that while Japan's first goal was irregular, Egyptian referee Essam Abdel Fatah should also have given Japan a penalty. Soccernet; Guardian; Aljazeera. The Age;
Following the match against Japan and a subsequent 2-0 loss to Brazil, the Socceroos were left in the position of facing their final match against Croatia with the knowledge that a draw would put them through to the knockout stage of the FIFA world cup for the first time in their history. After a match fraught with erroneous decisions from the referee, Graham Poll (including a unprecedented three yellow cards given to the same Croatian player, Simunic), they achieved this feat with a 2-2 draw.
In the second round, the Italian national team beat Australia 1-0 in a very close game. Spanish referee Luis Medina Cantalejo, awarded a very questionable penalty kick to Italy eight seconds from the end of injury time which Francesco Totti converted.
Despite the obvious injustices of the final games of his tenure, his contributions toward Australian football have been remarkable. A telling example of the Australian public's taking towards him has been the notable, endearing chant of "Goooooooooooos!" during moments of play, heard all about the nation.
| 1983 - 1990 | PSV Eindhoven ('83-87 as assistant) |
| 1990 - 1991 | Fenerbahçe |
| 1991 - 1994 | Valencia |
| 1995 - 1998 | Dutch National Team |
| 1998 - 1999 | Real Madrid |
| 2000 - 2000 | Real Betis |
| 2001 - 2002 | South Korean National Team |
| 2002 - May 2006 | PSV Eindhoven |
| 2005 - July 2006 | Australian National Team |
| July 2006 onwards | Russian National Team |
1947 births | Living people | Dutch football managers | Real Madrid managers | Real Betis managers | Valencia CF managers | La Liga managers | Dutch footballers | NASL players | PSV Eindhoven footballers | FIFA World Cup 2006 managers
Guus Hiddink | Guus Hiddink | Guus Hiddink | 거스 히딩크 | Guus Hiddink | Guus Hiddink | Guus Hiddink | Guus Hiddink | フース・ヒディンク | Guus Hiddink | Guus Hiddink | Хиддинк, Гус | Guus Hiddink | Guus Hiddink
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