More than a few coaches will be finding it hard to believe this Rafik Saifi’s transformation from bad boy to trusted international skipper and role model for younger team-mates.

During a decade in France – with Troyes, Istres, Ajaccio and Lorient – no one ever questioned the 34-year-old’s technical ability, delicate touch or wide range of flicks and backheels. Yet, in the eyes of most, his undoubted skills came at too high a price.

“He was a player who would have you tearing your hair out,” says his former boss at Istres, Mecha Bazdarevic. “One trick would never be enough for him.

“He would have to do it twice or three times. If he was through on goal, a simple side-footed finish was not his style. He’d have to go for something spectacular.

“Of course, the fans loved it. But, when you are fighting against relegation, he’s a luxury you cannot afford.

“He’s an artist. Not one for effectiveness. In times past, when everybody played to win, he’d be the first on the team sheet. But not now.

“That said, he’d be a sensation at a club like Marseille, where the supporters love extravagant ability. He would have had the Stade Velodrome in his pocket.”

But it seems you can teach an old dog new tricks. While still able to turn a game with a devastating dribble or magical party piece, Saifi unexpectedly reinvented himself during the 2010 qualifiers, toning down the overt individualism and at long last learning how to mix up the flashes of genius with basic, but nonetheless essential, link-up work – the sort of tasks he once would have thought below him.

Rather than showboating, he is now more focused on winning games for Algeria, and he certainly did his fair share of spadework en route to South Africa, forever impressing with his quick feet, vision and goals.

The one-time lone ranger has also developed into a fine skipper; a guiding light on and off the pitch. Following his team’s 2-0 loss in Egypt, a result which meant the two countries would have to play-off in Khartoum, the Algerians were in a state of shock – traumatised not only by the defeat, but also by the stoning of their bus on arrival in Cairo. But comfortable in his role as leader, Saifi stepped forward to rally the troops.

And he did a good job too, with Algeria winning the Sudan showdown 1-0 to book only their third World Cup finals appearance, after 1982 and 1986.

“I said my piece to the boys, so did our coach [Rabah Saadane],” says Saifi. “But
after the violence in Cairo no one in our camp really needed motivating for the play-off.

“We felt we were victims of an injustice, and to make it worse this happened in another Arab country. We had players hurt on that bus, including myself. The Egyptians said we made it all up. But we had proof. We filmed it on our mobiles. FIFA should have done a lot more about it.

“[Diego] Maradona says a few words and he’s suspended for two months. We, on the other hand, had no redress.”

Straight talking is second nature to Saifi. When Troyes coach Alain Perrin asked him
to go easy with the Ramadan fasting, he angrily threatened to quit, and last year he accused referee Tony Chapron of telling him to “shut your mouth”.

Some assumed Saifi’s decision to leave Ligue 1 Lorient last summer for the Al Khor club in Qatar would signal the end of his international career. Not a bit of it. The “Algerian Cantona” is ready for one last hurrah.