Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Spain’s sacking of coach bears logic

- JOHN LEICESTER

MOSCOW As completely and utterly crazy as it looks for Spain to cut off its own head on the eve of the World Cup, there is a logical explanatio­n for the out-ofthe-blue, “Are you frigging kidding me?” decision to sack Julen Lopetegui as coach just two days before he was to lead the Spanish team against Portugal.

Simply put: A leader can’t lead effectivel­y if he is beholden to two masters at once.

Accepting a job from Real Madrid to replace departed coach Zinedine Zidane, when his country expected him to focus 100 per cent on winning the World Cup with a Spain team talented enough to lift the trophy, made Lopetegui the architect of his own downfall.

Securing his post-world Cup future before Spain had kicked a ball in Russia suggested, at the very least, that Lopetegui’s mind wasn’t fully zeroed in on the job Spain paid him for: To ensure that the 2010 World Cup winners do not crash out in humiliatio­n after three games, as they did in 2014.

At worse, saying “Si” to Madrid so quickly, instead of saying, “I’m terribly busy, get back to me in a few weeks?” suggested that Lopetegui’s heart wasn’t fully devoted to Spain, either.

“The federation cannot be left out of a negotiatio­n by one of its workers and be informed five minutes before the press release,” Spanish soccer federation president Luis Rubiales said.

Maybe Madrid made Lopetegui a take-it-or-leave-it offer. Perhaps he tried and failed to persuade the club to postpone news of his hiring until after the World Cup. Either way, Madrid’s announceme­nt had the ultimate effect of making Lopetegui look selfish, as though he cared more about himself and his next step on the career ladder than his country’s immediate future. How, in the wake of that, were his players expected to remain loyal to him when his loyalties were visibly shifting elsewhere?

Being the coach-in-waiting of Madrid while also coaching Spain was, in football terms, also like Mick Jagger telling another band that he’d be happy to leave Keith Richards and join them while just about to embark on a long-planned tour with the Rolling Stones. Having a stake in Spain and in Madrid left Lopetegui vulnerable to potentiall­y explosive conflicts of interest.

Six members of the 23-man Spain squad play their club football for Real Madrid. So just imagine the questions and doubts that Lopetegui might have faced if and when he fielded them in Russia. Did he pick Player X on merit alone? Or was it to curry favour with a member of the team upon whom his fortunes as coach will depend in a few weeks?

If Spain recovers quickly from the shock of Lopetegui’s firing, the federation president will be able to argue that he was wise to make a clean break, before play begins, rather than after a few games, when a mid-world Cup firing might have been more destabiliz­ing.

Then again, it leaves replacemen­t coach Fernando Hierro in an unenviable position.

If the former national team player and Real Madrid captain fails to steady the ship and Spain again takes an early flight home, all that anyone will remember of its 2018 World Cup will be: LOL, crazy.

 ??  ?? Fernando Hierro
Fernando Hierro

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