fewer and fewer French coaches in Ligue 1… and in other European championships

Italian Fabio Grosso, successor to Laurent Blanc at Olympique Lyonnais, is the tenth foreign coach in Ligue 1 this season. This is unprecedented.

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The new OL coach, Fabio Grosso.  Here in Sion (Switzerland), in August 2020 (JEAN-CHRISTOPHE BOTT / KEYSTONE)

Three years ago, 80% of Ligue 1 coaches were French. Since then, they have been losing ground. A situation that the coach of the France team Didier Deschamps deeply regrets: “I find that the French coach is not valued. Does this come from the fact that there are also more and more foreign owners?”

“I find that a lot of credit is given to a foreign coach, compared to a French coach who does the same thing.”

Didier Deschamps, coach of the Blues

at a press conference

Simple fashion or real grievances? Didier Digard in Nice, Philippe Montanier in Toulouse, Christophe Galtier in Paris were disembarked; place Francesco Farioli, Carles Martinez or Luis Enrique.

Ligue 1 is becoming more international, but the French have no problem, assures the Spaniard Marcelino, who arrived this summer on the OM bench: “I came here with humility. In no way do I feel superior to a French coach! I try to rely on the values ​​which have allowed me until now to have a good career, but without ever giving lesson to anyone or pretend to be able to teach things to French football.”

And abroad, the trend is even worse: French technicians have disappeared from the radar, apart from Rudi Garcia, in Naples. He is the only one still in position in the four major European championships.


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