Chelsea sack coach Luiz Felipe Scolari

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Chelsea sack coach Luiz Felipe Scolari after only eight months in the job

From correspondents in London, England
February 10, 2009

CHELSEA have sacked manager Luiz Felipe Scolari after falling behind in the Barclays Premier League title race, the club announced on Tuesday morning (EDT).

The Blues lie fourth in the table, seven points behind leaders Manchester United after being booed off the pitch by their own fans at Stamford Bridge following a goalless draw with top-flight new boys Hull City on the weekend.

"Unfortunately, the results and performances of the team appeared to be deteriorating at a key time in the season," a Chelsea statement confirming Scolari's dismissal said.

"In order to maintain a challenge for the trophies we are still competing for we felt the only option was to make the change now."

Scolari, the 2002 World Cup-winning coach of Brazil, was in his first season at the club owned by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, and he was sacked with immediate effect.

Chelsea's statement added: "The search for a new manager had already started and we hope to have someone in place as soon as possible.

"Felipe has brought many positives to the club since he joined, and we all feel a sense of sadness that our relationship has ended so soon."

Assistant manager Ray Wilkins, a former Chelsea captain, will take charge of Chelsea on a temporary basis.

Sky Sports News reported that Russia coach Guus Hiddink, linked with the Chelsea job last year, was a candidate to take over.

Reports also said that Avram Grant, the man Scolari replaced in July, could return to the club, although he has also been linked with the vacancy at Portsmouth, after Tony Adams was sacked.

Some Chelsea fans during the weekend match called for former player Gianfranco Zola, now in charge of London rivals West Ham, to replace Scolari.

But the Italian's lawyer, Fulvio Marrucco, in a statement quoted by Sky, said that no approach had been made by Chelsea for Zola.

"At the moment we know nothing about the link between Gianfranco Zola and the vacant position at Chelsea,'' Marrucco said.

"Gianfranco is very happy at West Ham and still thanks them for giving him the opportunity to be a coach in the Premier League.

"It is very difficult to say if anything will happen, but Chelsea is a special place for Gianfranco Zola.''

Scolari, who won the 2002 World Cup with Brazil, was manager of Portugal before he took over at Chelsea - his first job in European club management.

Chelsea great John Hollins said that lack of experience of club football had ultimately counted against the 60-year-old.

"You can't knock him for what he's done internationally but club football is a different ball game," Hollins, who after playing for Chelsea managed the club for three years in the 1980s, told Sky Sports.

"I feel he couldn't adapt to the every day thing (of club management). Internationally he's had time to look at a game and pick a team but (Chelsea) is instant.".

Scolari is the seventh Premier League manager to be sacked or to quit this season.

Agence France-Presse
 

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Alex Ferguson shocked by Chelsea's sacking of Luiz Felipe Scolari

From correspondents in London, England
February 10, 2009

LUIZ Felipe Scolari's sacking as Chelsea manager left Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson feeling stunned the Brazilian's time at Stamford Bridge had been so brief.

Scolari, who led his native Brazil to World Cup glory in 2002, only arrived at Stamford Bridge towards the end of June.

But the 60-year-old was sacked after seeing the London club fall down the Barclays Premier League table to fourth place, seven points behind leaders United, after a goalless draw at home to Hull City on the weekend.

"I am really surprised. It is a shock so soon - he only took the job seven months ago," Ferguson told MUTV, United's own television station.

"He is a man of great experience; he took Brazil to World Cup winners - and was the obvious choice to replace Avram Grant," added the Scot, who has been in charge at Old Trafford since 1986

"It is a sign of the times. There is absolutely no patience in the world now," said the former Aberdeen manager who early in his United career faced calls for his sacking before, after United great Sir Bobby Charlton spoke up for him, winning the FA Cup in 1990.

Ferguson said that with the sports pages of Britain's newspapers increasingly fixated with football, the media had a role in the increasingly short tenure of many managers.

"It just seems to be more volatile now. You can't always blame the press - but they play a part," he said.

"The way the tabloids are - competing against the Internet and Sky News - there is a sensationalism every time someone has a bad result.

"There was great expectation at Chelsea that they were going to do well this year - and it is only this last month they have had a bad spell.

"The judgment really is only on the last month."

Former Chelsea manager Glenn Hoddle, in charge at the Bridge from 1993 to 1996 before taking on the England job, backed Ferguson's view by telling Chelsea TV: "I think any manager nowadays needs a bit more time than Scolari's had - so yes, I'm surprised.

"But obviously the standards Chelsea are looking for are right up there and anyone that takes a job like Chelsea knows the pressure is there.

"That pressure has probably built up in the last month and it looks like that's the reason."

Hoddle said clubs should follow the example of United and Arsenal, where Arsene Wenger has been in charge since 1996, and give their managers a decent length of time to build a team.

"Teams like Manchester United and Arsenal have built over longevity, they've let the manager build a team then rebuild and rebuild again.

"It works even down in the lower leagues. People are changing managers two or three, maybe four times a season - they don't understand how long it takes to build a side and once you've built a side you only need to change two or three players, or maybe one player, to make it better.

"But if you keep sacking managers it's never going to happen."

Agence France-Presse
 

B-Train

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Yeah they were struggling for results and yes they should have been doing better with who they have and the teams they played.

But in all honesty, who could they possibly hire that would be a better candidate than Scolari?

He is by far one of the best managers in the world and Ferguson has a point in that nowadays managers are fired way too quickly.
 
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Al.Bundy

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Certainly lol chelsea

SAF and hoddle are spot on though. There is no such thing as patience in football anymore. They expect to bring in a new coach and suddenly b as successful as man united. It doesn't work that way. United have had lean years and years that were there for rebuilding. How can a manager impose himself in such a short tme?

Lol chelsea
 

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they're trying to go with the instant fix, they prob shouldn't have gotten rid of mr toad last yr was doing well for em, but still ffs give the guy time. not even a yr and they chuck him
 

B-Train

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What manager who they would be after would want the job knowing the pressure they would be under and the lack of time and patience they would be afforded?
 

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it's the same thing over at real, lol didn't the guy win the spanish league and still got the sack cause they didn't win championsleague
 

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What a f**ken joke that is. He has proved to be a successful coach in the past - as others have said no patience shown.

Gotta feel for the new guy who comes in though, talk about being in a pressure situation....
 

K E

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Ah, the life of a Chelsea manager.....
 

Malla

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Scape goat. Not his fault his players weren't performing.
 

K E

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Chelsea should sack Ballack and Lampard and send them to Arsenal as further punishment IMO.
 

MattO

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Certainly lol chelsea

SAF and hoddle are spot on though. There is no such thing as patience in football anymore. They expect to bring in a new coach and suddenly b as successful as man united. It doesn't work that way. United have had lean years and years that were there for rebuilding. How can a manager impose himself in such a short tme?

Lol chelsea
Has anything been written by either of the dynamic duo on Sports Force yet?
 

K E

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He was setting you up so you could take the piss, Doga.
 
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Dogaholic

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He was setting you up so you could take the piss, Doga.

Yeah, i know. I am a little busy right now though.

Sports Farce doesn't need any jokes from me. It does a good job of that on it's own.
 

Berries

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Whatever happened to time and letting the coach bond with players?

Soccer just thinks some guy with a hard to pronounce name will win them a title.
 

Özil

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Chelsea remind me of this MTV show called Next

Claudio Ranieri - 1 season
Jose Mourinho - 2 seasons and a bit
Avram Grant - less then a season
Felipe Scolari - 8 months

Next
 
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