World Cup glory attracts superstar coaches into international battle
FILES) Bayern Munich's German head coach Julian Nagelsmann reacts during the German first division Bundesliga football match RB Leipzig vs FC Bayern Munich in Leipzig, eastern Germany, on September 11, 2021. (Photo by Ronny Hartmann / AFP)
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The 2026 World Cup has bucked the trend of international
football's struggles to compete with the riches of the club game when it comes
to securing some of the world's best coaches.
Citizen Digital sport looks at five of the big names who
have been lured by the quest for World Cup glory:
Thomas Tuchel
(England)
The former Bayern Munich, Chelsea and Paris Saint-Germain
boss has become the English Football Association’s latest gun for hire in a bid
to end a wait to win a major tournament that stretches back to 1966.
Englishman Gareth Southgate came closer than any of his
predecessors to ending that drought when in charge of the Three Lions, reaching
two finals of the Euros, plus a World Cup quarter and semi-final.
But Southgate’s in-game management and tactical acumen was
often questioned in the biggest games.
A Champions League winner during his time at Chelsea, Tuchel
boasts a more impressive CV at club level.
But questions remain over how his methods will transfer to
the very different demands of international tournament football, particularly
in the oppressive conditions that a squad run down by the rigours of the
exhausting schedule of English football is expected to face.
Carlo Ancelotti
(Brazil)
After decades of coming up short against European opposition
in the latter stages of the World Cup, Brazil have turned to one of European
football’s greatest ever coaches to end the 24-year wait for a sixth star upon
the famous yellow jersey.
By a distance the most successful boss in Champions League
history with five titles, Ancelotti is an expert in navigating knockout
football and the Italian already has experience working with some of the stars
at his disposal.
Vinicius Junior’s best football of his career came under Ancelotti’s
orders at Real Madrid.
A squad lacking some of the magic synonymous with Brazil
sides of previous World Cups will need Vinicius at his best if they are to
conquer the world again.
Famous for keeping a cool head and egos in check, Ancelotti
can bring calm to the Selecao’s often over-emotional quest to rule the world
once more.
Mauricio Pochettino
(USA)
After a rollercoaster two years in charge without much
competitive football, Pochettino’s time in the States faces the acid test.
The Argentine has at times clashed with local media, while results
have been underwhelming.
The US have failed to win either the Gold Cup or CONCACAF
Nations League under Pochettino, losing in embarrassing fashion on home soil to
Panama, Mexico and Canada.
Hope that a corner had been turned in impressive friendly
wins over Uruguay and Japan was quickly quelled by comprehensive defeats to
Portugal and Belgium in March.
Marcelo Bielsa
(Uruguay)
A reference point for many of the top coaches of the modern
game from Pep Guardiola to Pochettino, Bielsa has possibly a final chance to
shine on the global stage as he leads a third different nation at a World Cup.
Landmark victories over Brazil and Argentina in qualifying
fuelled the optimism that greeted the Argentine’s arrival on the other side of
the Rio de la Plata.
But in a familiar pattern to Bielsa’s career in club
coaching, cracks have begun to appear with a squad struggling to match his
famously exacting standards.
Luis Suarez hit out at Bielsa’s methods after retiring from
international football, claiming he had reduced former Liverpool striker Darwin
Nunez to tears at half-time of a 2-0 win over Argentina such was the force of
his criticism.
Results have also regressed, with Bielsa stating he was
“ashamed” by a 5-1 friendly defeat to the USA in November.
Bielsa oversaw his native Argentina’s disappointing group
stage exit at the 2002 World Cup, but guided Chile to the last 16 in South
Africa 16 years ago.
Julian Nagelsmann
(Germany)
Nagelsmann fell just short of delivering glory to Germany on
home soil at the Euros two years ago when they were knocked out by eventual
winners Spain in the quarter-finals and he is expected to have just one more
shot before returning to the club game.
Still aged just 38, the former Bayern Munich boss restored
pride to die Mannschaft after a disastrous run of three major tournaments
without a knockout victory between 2018 and 2024, which included two consecutive
group stage exits from the World Cup.
Nagelsmann may need all of his tactical nous if Germany are
to move alongside Brazil as the most successful nation in World Cup history.
Complicating his task, the key trio of Florian Wirtz, Jamal
Musiala and Kai Havertz have endured difficult club seasons due to form or
fitness.

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