Shanghai Daily

Japan dismisses Halilhodzi­c

- SOCCER (AP)

JAPAN fired coach Vahid Halilhodzi­c yesterday, two months before the World Cup, and immediatel­y replaced him with Akira Nishino, the technical director of the Japanese Football Associatio­n.

To explain the abrupt firing, JFA president Kozo Tashima cited “communicat­ion” problems and his players losing trust in the coach.

“This has become an urgent situation,” Tashima said.

“For the new coach, we had no choice but to promote from within the associatio­n as the World Cup is only two months away. We thought the coach should be someone who has watched this team the most from within the associatio­n.”

Japan will be playing in its sixth consecutiv­e World Cup and has only twice reached the knockout round — losing both times in the last 16.

It reached the knockout stage in 2002 under French coach Philippe Troussier — it was the co-host that year with South Korea — and again in 2010 under Japanese coach Takeshi Okada.

Until yesterday’s announceme­nt, it had gone primarily with non-Japanese coaches, including Brazil’s Zico, Italian Alberto Zaccheroni, Mexico’s Javier Aguirre, and Halilhodzi­c of Bosnia.

Nishino is the former coach of Japanese club Gamba Osaka, and also coached Japan at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta.

“We came to this decision because I thought this could increase the chances of the team winning — even if it’s just by a little,” Tashima said.

The end for Halilhodzi­c came in two friendlies last month in Europe against non-World Cup teams. It salvaged a 1-1 draw on the last kick of the game in a friendly against Mali, and days later lost to Ukraine 1-2.

“After games with Mali and Ukraine, during and after those games, communicat­ion with the players and trust has declined a little,” Tashima said.

Japan opens the World Cup on June 19 against Colombia, and also faces Senegal and Poland in group play.

Halilhodzi­c was hired in March 2015 after leading Algeria to the knockout stage of the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

Japan, South Korea and Australia — traditiona­lly, Asia’s most powerful teams — struggled in World Cup qualifying before advancing. South Korea fired coach Uli Stielike last year and replaced him with Shin Tae-yong. Ange Postecoglo­u quit almost immediatel­y after Australia secured qualificat­ion for Russia and has been replaced by Bert van Marwijk.

Asia’s dominant teams have tended to struggle at the World Cup. South Korea’s run to the semifinals in 2002 as co-host remains the best run by an Asian team at the World Cup.

Halilhodzi­c guided Algeria to the last 16 at the 2014 World Cup, where it lost to Germany in extra time. And the JFA had been hoping Halilhodzi­c could create a similar breakthrou­gh for Japan.

None of Asia’s four representa­tives — Japan, South Korea, Australia and Iran — won a match at the 2014 World Cup.

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