If imitation really is the sincerest form of flattery then surely Sarina Wiegman’s suit says it all.
The England head coach is one win away from a second consecutive women’s EURO trophy, having guided her native Netherlands to glory in 2017.
Britain has exponentially taken notice of the steely blue-eyed woman who has guided the Lionesses to Sunday’s Wembley showdown with Germany, surpassing even some of her own squad to become one of the most recognisable faces at this tournament.
That fashion editors are now telling admirers where to nab her pitch-side uniform, a dark £45 M&S blazer with matching trousers, paired with a white button-down and Nike trainers, says a lot about how quickly the 52-year-old’s stock has risen since she took the helm last September.
The no-nonsense look, which has seen sales of her signature blazer rise by 140 per cent since last week, very much reflects the modus operandi of its wearer, who has yet to change her starting XI.
“She looks calm, she looks cool, I’ve heard players talk about how honest she is with them,” former Lioness Kelly Smith, who earned 117 caps for England, told PA news agency.
“There’s no BS, which some managers can give you. She’s just, ‘this is what you need to do. If you don’t do this, then potentially you won’t play, I need to see this from you’. It’s very to the point, and I think the players have never had that before.
“And they’re liking it, that it’s kind of basic, but they’re taking it on board. They just seem so unified and united.”
The ‘Sarina suit’ wasn’t the first significant sartorial choice the former PE teacher has made over the course of her remarkable, record-breaking, glass ceiling-shattering career.
Before the trophies, the accolades, and this weekend’s trip to the ‘home of football’ came ‘The Haircut’.
There were no girls’ teams available when Wiegman first started playing in hometown the Hague, but mixed-gender sides were forbidden. Determined, the future FIFA Best Women’s Coach winner — the only woman to hold the title twice — chopped off her hair to better blend in with her twin brother and the boys.
“Sometimes, when people saw I was a girl, they made trouble,” she wrote in The Coaches’ Voice.
“Other times we got nice reactions. But most of the time it was hard to play.”
Wiegman’s breakthrough came at 16, when she was first selected for the Dutch national team and whisked away to China to play in a proof-of-concept tournament for a future Women’s World Cup.
There, she met US women’s national team coach Anson Dorrance, who also led the women’s setup at the University of North Carolina. It didn’t take much to convince Wiegman, then-frustrated with the Netherlands’ commitment to women’s football, to take her next steps Stateside.
She wrote: “In the Netherlands, it felt like we were always fighting for our place. Like we weren’t accepted. I wanted more and I knew that, in the US, things were better.”
Unfamiliarity gave way to comfort, then confidence, as Wiegman realised there were others like her, pushing for more and better in the game she loved. It instilled a sense of ruthlessness — a descriptor that has followed Wiegman to this day — in the young footballer.
She would go on to become the Dutch women’s team’s first centurion, earning 104 caps alongside two domestic titles with Ter Leede before retiring in 2003, when she began to balance PE teaching with coaching.
The mother of two was recruited by ADO Den Haag in 2007 to lead their newly-formed Eredivisie Vrouwen side, a job she insisted on taking only if it was made full-time. Seven years later she was back in the national team setup, this time as head coach Roger Reijners’ assistant.
She also upskilled, intern coaching with men’s side Sparta Rotterdam whilst on her Pro License course, making Wiegman the first woman to coach with a Dutch men’s professional club.
Wiegman was handed the Netherlands’ top job permanently in 2017, just six months before she would guide the hosts to home Euros victory — the sea of orange-clad supporters, who have made their presence loudly known here this summer, a testament to how far the game had come and her role in it.
Some might suggest Wiegman seems stern and reserved. She was, after all, the person who unsentimentally named Leah Williamson captain when injured long-serving skipper Steph Houghton’s status was still unknown, lending England some vital consistency in the tournament build-up.
But behind the crisp button-down is someone with a wry smile and an understated sense of humour, a woman who recently burst into giggles when asked if she was a ‘serial winner’ and has looked increasingly exuberant and generous with hugs after each final whistle.
Make no mistake: Wiegman will still wear the suit on Sunday, but in the event of victory, well, she might just add a little party hat.
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