<p>Andrea Pirlo takes his first managerial steps in the Champions League at Dynamo Kiev on Tuesday, a game which pits the fledgling Juventus coach against his vastly experienced former mentor Mircea Lucescu.</p>.<p>Lucescu, 75, and 41-year-old Pirlo have both taken over their respective clubs this season.</p>.<p>But while Italy footballing legend Pirlo never coached before stepping up at his former club, Lucescu has over four decades experience throughout Europe.</p>.<p>And it was the former Romanian international who gave a 16-year-old Pirlo his first Serie A start in the Italian's hometown club Brescia 25 years ago.</p>.<p>The much-travelled Lucescu also later coached Pirlo at Inter Milan in 1998.</p>.<p>For Lucescu, who won six league titles as a player with Dinamo Bucharest in the 1960s and 1970s, seeing Pirlo on the opposition bench comes as no surprise.</p>.<p>"I was always convinced he would become a coach," said Lucescu.</p>.<p>"I thought it about Andrea, and also Diego Simeone, who was one of my players at Pisa.</p>.<p>"Pirlo had a different personality than 'Cholo' (Simeone) but he was just as charismatic and with a lot of character.</p>.<p>"Above all, he never came on the pitch to do nothing, he was decisive.</p>.<p>"As well as being a creative player, he was someone who organised everything, which is yet another skill."</p>.<p>Whether he can follow former players Pep Guardiola and Zinedine Zidane's managerial success remains to be seen.</p>.<p>"It's possible, I hope he does," the Romanian told Turin daily Tuttosport.</p>.<p>"But a coach needs at least six months to stamp his mark on a team."</p>.<p>Pirlo took over the reigning nine-time Serie A champions after Maurizo Sarri was sacked following Juventus' Champions League last 16 exit to Lyon.</p>.<p>Juve hope Pirlo, who won a World Cup, two Champions Leagues and six Italian league titles as a player, can transmit his vision of the game.</p>.<p>The team are chasing a third Champions League title after 1985 and 1996, with seven runners-up finishing including in 2015 and 2017.</p>.<p>But for Pirlo, his Juventus are "under construction, a young team who need to gain experience".</p>.<p>A season-opening 3-0 win over Sampdoria was followed by draws at AS Roma (2-2) and promoted Crotone (1-1), with two red cards in as many games.</p>.<p>To complicate the task, Cristiano Ronaldo is quarantined because of coronavirus, and will miss the Kiev trip and possibly the game against Barcelona in Turin.</p>.<p>As models Pirlo cites the Barcelona teams of Guardiola and Johan Cruyff, Louis van Gaal's Ajax, Carlo Ancelotti's AC Milan and Antonio Conte's Juventus.</p>.<p>But first up are Lucescu's Ukrainian league runners-up.</p>.<p>"It's a competition that I'm accustomed to," said Lucescu whose appointment as Kiev boss had sparked an uproar after his successful 12-year spell in charge of bitter rivals Shakhtar Donetsk, where he won the 2009 UEFA Cup.</p>.<p>"It's a competition that I'm accustomed to. I've been involved in more than 130 games.</p>.<p>"The Champions League anthem is like your national anthem."</p>.<p>Lucescu's Dynamo are also "a very young squad".</p>.<p>"My aim is to build this team," he said.</p>.<p>"It's not possible in football to start and get results straight away. There are no miracles in football."</p>.<p>Over his 40-year career, Lucescu has coached the Romanian and Turkish national teams as well as clubs in Romania, Italy, Turkey, Ukraine and Russia.</p>.<p>"I find motivation in my passion for football," he told UEFA.com.</p>.<p>"I tried to stop last year, because I've worked for 50 years without a break, but it was impossible.</p>.<p>"I wanted to come back, there was so much I could still give to football, especially to young players.</p>.<p>"So, I came back and I feel good being back at work."</p>
<p>Andrea Pirlo takes his first managerial steps in the Champions League at Dynamo Kiev on Tuesday, a game which pits the fledgling Juventus coach against his vastly experienced former mentor Mircea Lucescu.</p>.<p>Lucescu, 75, and 41-year-old Pirlo have both taken over their respective clubs this season.</p>.<p>But while Italy footballing legend Pirlo never coached before stepping up at his former club, Lucescu has over four decades experience throughout Europe.</p>.<p>And it was the former Romanian international who gave a 16-year-old Pirlo his first Serie A start in the Italian's hometown club Brescia 25 years ago.</p>.<p>The much-travelled Lucescu also later coached Pirlo at Inter Milan in 1998.</p>.<p>For Lucescu, who won six league titles as a player with Dinamo Bucharest in the 1960s and 1970s, seeing Pirlo on the opposition bench comes as no surprise.</p>.<p>"I was always convinced he would become a coach," said Lucescu.</p>.<p>"I thought it about Andrea, and also Diego Simeone, who was one of my players at Pisa.</p>.<p>"Pirlo had a different personality than 'Cholo' (Simeone) but he was just as charismatic and with a lot of character.</p>.<p>"Above all, he never came on the pitch to do nothing, he was decisive.</p>.<p>"As well as being a creative player, he was someone who organised everything, which is yet another skill."</p>.<p>Whether he can follow former players Pep Guardiola and Zinedine Zidane's managerial success remains to be seen.</p>.<p>"It's possible, I hope he does," the Romanian told Turin daily Tuttosport.</p>.<p>"But a coach needs at least six months to stamp his mark on a team."</p>.<p>Pirlo took over the reigning nine-time Serie A champions after Maurizo Sarri was sacked following Juventus' Champions League last 16 exit to Lyon.</p>.<p>Juve hope Pirlo, who won a World Cup, two Champions Leagues and six Italian league titles as a player, can transmit his vision of the game.</p>.<p>The team are chasing a third Champions League title after 1985 and 1996, with seven runners-up finishing including in 2015 and 2017.</p>.<p>But for Pirlo, his Juventus are "under construction, a young team who need to gain experience".</p>.<p>A season-opening 3-0 win over Sampdoria was followed by draws at AS Roma (2-2) and promoted Crotone (1-1), with two red cards in as many games.</p>.<p>To complicate the task, Cristiano Ronaldo is quarantined because of coronavirus, and will miss the Kiev trip and possibly the game against Barcelona in Turin.</p>.<p>As models Pirlo cites the Barcelona teams of Guardiola and Johan Cruyff, Louis van Gaal's Ajax, Carlo Ancelotti's AC Milan and Antonio Conte's Juventus.</p>.<p>But first up are Lucescu's Ukrainian league runners-up.</p>.<p>"It's a competition that I'm accustomed to," said Lucescu whose appointment as Kiev boss had sparked an uproar after his successful 12-year spell in charge of bitter rivals Shakhtar Donetsk, where he won the 2009 UEFA Cup.</p>.<p>"It's a competition that I'm accustomed to. I've been involved in more than 130 games.</p>.<p>"The Champions League anthem is like your national anthem."</p>.<p>Lucescu's Dynamo are also "a very young squad".</p>.<p>"My aim is to build this team," he said.</p>.<p>"It's not possible in football to start and get results straight away. There are no miracles in football."</p>.<p>Over his 40-year career, Lucescu has coached the Romanian and Turkish national teams as well as clubs in Romania, Italy, Turkey, Ukraine and Russia.</p>.<p>"I find motivation in my passion for football," he told UEFA.com.</p>.<p>"I tried to stop last year, because I've worked for 50 years without a break, but it was impossible.</p>.<p>"I wanted to come back, there was so much I could still give to football, especially to young players.</p>.<p>"So, I came back and I feel good being back at work."</p>