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Ex-Arsenal star Henry to coach Montreal Impact

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Montreal: Former Arsenal star Thierry Henry was on Thursday appointed coach at MLS franchise Montreal Impact on a two-year contract as he gets a new chance of management after a disastrous spell at Monaco.


“Welcome to Montreal @ThierryHenry!” the Major League Soccer (MLS) club tweeted.


Henry, whose baptism by fire as a manager ended in his firing by French club Monaco in January, will coach Impact for a minimum of two seasons. “Henry signed a two-year deal, with an option for 2022,” the club said on its website.


Henry, 42, who helped France win the World Cup in 1998, is familiar with the MLS, having played from 2010 to 2014 with the New York Red Bulls.


He scored 51 goals and had 42 assists in 122 games with the club.


“It’s an honour to coach the Montreal Impact and return to MLS,” said Henry. “It’s a league I know well, in which I had some very nice moments.


“I’ve always kept an eye on the club and now I’m here.”


Henry becomes the seventh coach of the Montreal Impact in just eight years, succeeding Colombian Wilmer Cabrera, who was acting coach for two months after the dismissal in August of French coach Remi Garde after 10 months in charge.


Henry made his name as a world-class player at Arsenal where he scored 228 goals in 377 appearances, making him the English club’s record goalscorer.


After winning the World Cup on home soil in 1998, he played in three further World Cups in 2002, 2006 and 2010.


He is also France’s all-time leading scorer with 51 goals in 123 games, in front of Michel Platini.


Undimmed desire to coach


His much-heralded return to Monaco ended in the sack as the team plummeted to second-from-bottom in the league.


So he must still prove himself as a coach and show he is capable of standing up to the team’s owner Joey Saputo, who is reputed to meddle in the affairs of his managers — including stopping by the team’s locker room to share post-game criticisms. Henry could have contented himself as a highly-paid TV pundit in Britain, but his desire to coach remained


strong.


He previously also turned down offers to be an assistant coach, setting his eyes on the top job after already having been number two to Roberto Martinez when Belgium reached the semifinals of the 2018 World Cup.


“Call me crazy if you want, but I love football and I believe I can be a successful coach,” Henry told the Daily Telegraph in August.


Despite the Monaco setback, he said: “I came out of it fully reassured that’s what I want to do, zero doubt about it.


“I saw some of my ex-coaches after I left and they said ‘Now you can say you are a coach because you’ve been sacked.’” — AFP


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