New Straits Times

Pressure on Sagnol to revive Georgian football

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TBILISI: Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c was not the only man making a return to internatio­nal football on Thursday night.

As the 39-year-old set up the Viktor Claesson goal that saw Sweden edge Georgia 1-0 in their opening World Cup qualifier, Willy Sagnol got a glimpse of the huge task he let himself in for when he agreed last month to take over as Georgia coach.

The 44-year-old former rightback played 58 times for France, including the 2006 World Cup final defeat to Italy, and began his managerial career in 2013 with the France under-20 team.

He then failed at Bordeaux and has not been seen in a management role since 2017, when he was Bayern Munich’s interim boss.

Now, Sagnol is facing the double challenge of not only creating a competitiv­e team but of convincing the Georgian football public that he is the man for the job.

“Sagnol’s appointmen­t astonished everyone in Georgia,” football journalist Bidzina Baratashvi­li told AFP.

“He was a good footballer but has a limited experience as a coach and has not been profession­ally active for several years.”

The Frenchman told AFP that he chose to take the job after the Georgian football federation made clear their “real desire” to have him on board.

Sagnol faces a monumental task in the World Cup qualifiers as, apart from Zlatan’s Sweden, his team is also grouped with Greece, Kosovo and next opponents Spain. Only the group winners qualify automatica­lly.

“We are in a tough group,” Sagnol said, adding that Georgia’s football federation “has not given me a specific objective for this qualifying group.”

“It is a federation which wants to continue to grow, to continue to progress. We must have positive developmen­ts compared to recent years.”

That appraisal, however, does not quite chime with the words coming from the federation whose vice-president Alexandre Iashvili told AFP that “the minimum objective (in the group) is third place.”

“The next objective is to win in Group C of the Nations League and then to play in the European Championsh­ip,” said Iashvili.

Sagnol will get his second chance as Georgia host Spain in Tbilisi today.

The stadium will not be full but nor will it be empty as the federation has been permitted to sell 30 percent of tickets. That may give the fans a chance to let Sagnol know first-hand what they think of his appointmen­t and his team.

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