Malta Independent

World Cup flop Spain parts ways with emergency coach Hierro

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Fernando Hierro is out as coach of Spain’s national team after less than a month in charge and a disappoint­ing four-game run at the World Cup. The Spanish federation said Sunday that it wanted “to thank Fernando Hierro for his commitment and for assuming the responsibi­lity of being in charge of the national team during some extraordin­ary situations.” Hierro was promoted from sporting director to the top job two days before Spain opened the tournament against Portugal. New federation president Luis Rubiales was incensed that previous coach Julen Lopetegui had agreed to take charge at Real Madrid after the World Cup without giving the federation sufficient notice. Lopetegui was summarily fired on June 13 despite a 20-game unbeaten streak that had made Spain one of the favorites coming into the tournament.

Spain drew with Portugal and Morocco and beat Iran 1-0 to win their group, then lost to Russia on penalties after a 1-1 draw in the round of 16, a match in which the Spanish were criticized for completing more than 1,000 passes without producing enough scoring chances.

The federation’s statement didn’t indicate whether Hierro left voluntaril­y but said he had declined to return to his previous role as sporting director. It called him “an extraordin­ary sportsman” and said the national team “would always be his home.”

Hierro, 50, is a former national team player and Real Madrid captain.

He served as sporting director when Spain won the 2008 European Championsh­ip and the 2010 World Cup, what the federation called “the national team’s greatest period.”

But he had never held a major coaching job.

“I couldn’t have said ‘no,’ I wouldn’t forgive myself,” Hierro said at the news conference introducin­g him as coach, two days before the match against European champion Portugal. “We still have a great opportunit­y in front of us. We have to remain positive and move forward.”

Later in the tournament, Hierro suggested he had stayed in contact with Lopetegui but said they didn’t discuss strategy.

“Julen has his job now, and I’ve got mine,” Hierro said after Spain won the group by a narrow margin. “I’ve got my hands full. We’re not sending texts to each other. We each have our own identities and our own ideas.

“We are friends and we might communicat­e as friends but we do not talk about football and tactics. Please don’t think that every time I have to make a decision I call up Lopetegui and ask his opinion.”

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