Arguably the hottest of hot
seats in soccer is vacant yet again after Chelsea`s ruthless Russian owner
Roman Abramovich removed Andre Villas-Boas on Sunday.
The callow Portuguese lasted
just 256 days at Stamford Bridge before "the project", as he usually
referred to the task of revitalizing the west London club’s ageing squad, was aborted.
The 34-year-old became the
sixth coach to be axed since the Russian oligarch bought the club in 2003 and
he will probably not be the last.
Accepting the Chelsea job is fraught
with danger and rarely ends in a warm handshake -- however much silverware is
added to the trophy cabinet.
Jose Mourinho, the most
successful manager in the club`s history, was jettisoned after losing a battle
of egos with the big boss and Carlo Ancelotti fell out of favour just a season
after landing the league and FA Cup double. Avram Grant came within a John
Terry penalty miss of handing Abramovich the Champions League he craves.
Only Guus Hiddink, whose
role was always a temporary one from February 2009 to the end of that season,
escaped the wrath of Abramovich -- leaving with a friendly pat on the back
after winning the FA Cup.
World Cup-winning coach Luiz
Felipe Scolari, the man Hiddink was brought in to replace, survived not even as
long as Villas-Boas and the Brazilian said on hearing of the latest casualty
that it will "be hell" for the next candidate.
But who will that be?
Speculation is already rife with a list including former Liverpool boss Rafa
Benitez, Mourinho and even possible England manager-in-waiting Harry
Redknapp.
Here is a quick look at the
leading candidates:
He could also be the man to
reboot misfiring striker Fernando Torres, having signed him for Liverpool .
JOSE MOURINHO
The Special One II sounds
like a Hollywood sequel but
Mourinho had a special bond
with the senior players during his three-year reign that brought two league
titles, although should he return he would want an enormous war chest that
could spell the end for the likes of Didier Drogba and John Terry.
PEP GUARDIOLA
Barcelona`s boss is rumoured
to be leaving the Nou Camp at the end of the season with no new contract signed
and FIFA`s World Coach of the Year would be a popular choice as Chelsea
manager.However, at Barca he merely
had to conduct the orchestra having inherited a squad of talented players in
their prime while at Chelsea
he would have to swap the baton for a sledgehammer as he begins a major
re-building project.
HARRY REDKNAPP
A long shot but a logical
choice for Abramovich.
Tottenham fans are already
resigned to losing their manager to England
-- but losing him to Chelsea
would be unthinkable.
His relationship with
Abramovich would be interesting but has a proven track record of turning round
teams` fortunes and fuelling players with confidence. He would be the first
Englishman to boss Chelsea
since Glenn Hoddle in 1996.
GUUS HIDDINK
The popular Dutchman has the
best win percentage of Abramovich`s managers, even better than Mourinho, albeit
during a brief spell as temporary coach. He steered Chelsea
to a 2009 FA Cup triumph and Champions League semi-final before returning to
his job as Russia
coach. The sticking point would be
prising him away from FC Anzhi Makhachkala ,
the mega-rich Russian club who have made him the highest paid coach in world
football only recently.
DIDIER DESCHAMPS
A safe pair of hands. The
astute Frenchman spent a year at Stamford
Bridge as a player before
a natural move into management.
He impressed at Monaco by
reaching a Champions League final, had a brief stint at Juventus taking them
back up to Serie A and won Ligue 1 in 2010 with Olympique Marseille.
Marseille have been up and
down since but he could be the man for a long-term project.





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