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Dimitri sparring | Dimitri sparring |
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Dimitri Piterman is no ordinary chap. Shortly after buying a 24 per cent majority shareholding in Racing Santander in January, the new millionaire president of the ailing Spanish top-flight club was stopped outside the entrance to the El Sardinero stadium by a TV journalist and asked if he thought that his stated intention of personally running all aspects of the club – right down to team management – was perhaps a tad over-ambitious, even arrogant? Especially when he was not qualified to do so? Piterman leaned into the beam of the cameras and eyeballed the journalist with a withering stare: “There’s a dork running the most powerful country in the world without a qualification to his name. And you ask me for a diploma to run a football team? Give me a break.” And so began one of the lengthiest media circuses witnessed in Spain over the past couple of decades, with the result that the 39-year-old Piterman has become at least as famous as Jesus Gil. Piterman, or “Doberman” as the tabloids have dubbed him, has kept a dignified distance from the sports media’s various attempts to smear him as an oligarchic madman. In early January, Racing Santander’s month-old announcement that it was severely in debt and in need of a benefactor had been ignored by several wealthy folk who might have been expected to put their hands into their pockets – local hero Seve Ballesteros among them – leaving the door ajar for Piterman, a Ukrainian Jew whose father had lost his eight brothers to the Nazis. Having survived the war and a lot more besides, the family eventually emigrated to California in 1976, and the young Dimitri soon made his name as an athlete and academic, ending up first at Berkeley and then as a property speculator in San Francisco. Fast forward 20 years and Piterman set up shop on the Costa Brava in Palamós, converting a hotel into a successful sports complex and buying his way into the local football team, then in the Spanish Third Division. He then signed ageing forward Chuchi Cos on the basis of the player’s coaching qualification, and used him to learn more about this aspect of the trade. The team soon won promotion to Segunda B, and were doing just fine when Piterman (and Cos) decided to take a dip in slightly deeper waters, up in Santander. While Piterman was doing his thing down at Palamós, no one cared. But for his first game “in charge” of Racing, away at Osasuna, practically every camera in Spain was focused on him. The Spanish FA, consistent as ever, banned him from the bench, forcing Piterman to persuade the Osasuna authorities to accredit him as a photographer, so that he could sit inside the fence. From WSC 195 May 2003. What was happening this month On the subject...
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