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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Brazil world champions... of firing coaches

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SAO PAULO: The coronavirus pandemic has swollen the unemployment rolls to record levels in Brazil, but take a moment to pity another kind of jobless worker: football coaches in the Brazilian top flight routinely fired for as few as four bad results.


Brazilian clubs are the world champions of sacking coaches, and the turnover has been high this year: 23 rounds into the season, no less than 22 coaches have already got the boot.


It is not just teams at the bottom of the table playing musical chairs with the coach’s seat in the dugout.


Three weeks ago, reigning Brazilian and South American champions Flamengo fired coach Domenec Torrent, Pep Guardiola’s longtime assistant, after barely three months in charge.


The Spaniard was sacked even though Flamengo were in third place, just one point off the top.


He was replaced by Rogero Ceni, under whom the Rio de Janeiro giants this week saw their defence of the Copa Libertadores end in a defeat on penalties by Argentine side Racing.


Of the 20 Serie A clubs, only five have not changed coaches yet this season.


A recent study found Brazil is the country where top-flight coaches are fired the most.


Directed by the German Sport University Cologne, the study examined the firing of coaches in the Brazilian league from 2003 to 2018.


The authors found an average 37.1 coaches were fired each season in Brazil, versus 21 in Argentina, 10 in England and 4.9 in France.


CULTURE CHANGE


Four consecutive bad results is often all it takes, the study found. Or getting eliminated from the Copa Libertadores, which increases a coach’s chance of being shown the exit by up to 560 per cent.


“The fact that teams are analysing performance on a time horizon of just four matches to decide whether to keep their coach shows how much management’s thinking at Brazilian clubs is dominated by short-term logic,” the study says.


Among the big clubs, Flamengo lead the list, with an average of 1.9 coaches per season, followed by Sao Paulo and Palmeiras at 1.6.


Coaches’ jobs are all the more difficult, given that clubs are often equally quick to sell their best players to Europe — Flamengo have not been the same since Spanish defender Pablo Mari left for Arsenal in January.


“We need to change our culture. Club presidents need to know why they hire and fire their coaches,” Paulo Vinicius Coelho, a commentator for Brazilian network SporTV, said.


The Brazilian national team has lately been an exception to the revolving-door trend. Coach Tite has held the job since 2016, and renewed his contract until 2022 after the last World Cup, even though Brazil were sent packing in the quarterfinals.


But he may be the exception that proves the rule: he is the first coach of the Selecao to keep his job after a World Cup — whether won or lost by the five-time world champions —since Claudio Coutinho in 1978.


His assistant, Cleber Xavier, recently said the high turnover rate for coaches was “one of the biggest problems” in Brazilian football.


— AFP


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