Khaleej Times

Asian teams still hiring and firing

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seoul — Japan’s surprise sacking of head coach Vahid Halilhodzi­c on Monday marked a fifth coaching change from Asia’s five participan­ts at the 2018 World Cup in the past nine months.

Only Iran, with Carlos Queiroz in place since 2011, has the same manager now as in June last year. Japan, Saudi Arabia and Australia all will have new coaches who will see their teams in competitiv­e action for the first time when the World Cup kicks off in June. South Korea’s coach Shin Taeyong was appointed in July 2017 and has two World Cup qualifiers under his belt.

For a continent desperate to improve on the 2014 World Cup when their four teams failed to record a single win, it is not ideal preparatio­n.

Just three wins from nine games since successful­ly securing qualificat­ion with a game to spare last August put Halilhodzi­c under pressure. This only increased after claims of a breakdown in trust and communicat­ion with players that followed friendly games against Mali and Ukraine in March.

Afshin Ghotbi, a former coach in Japan’s J.League with Shimizu S-Pulse, has extensive experience in Asia including with the national teams of Iran and South Korea.

“There are many different reasons in Asia but it often comes down to the difference­s between expectatio­ns and reality that can be seen in the form of a team during friendlies and this can lead to panic,” Ghotbi told Associated Press.

Halilhodzi­c has been replaced by Akira Nishino. Time is short for Nishino but the 63 year-old has extensive coaching experience in Japan, leading Gamba Osaka to the 2005 J.League title and the 2008 Asian Champions League.

Giving the job to Nishino is understand­able, Ghotbi says, as was South Korea’s decision to appoint an experience­d local coach last summer.

Ghotbi returned to Korea’s national team for a second stint in October 2005, just eight months before the 2006 World Cup. —

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