For the third time in his career, the Bosnian-French coach Vahid Halilhodzic found himself dismissed from his position a few months before the start of the World Cup following his success in leading the team he was supervising, to the finals.
On Thursday, the Moroccan Football Association announced its “mutual consent” separation from “Atlas Lions” coach Halilhodzic, three months before the start of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.
The Royal Moroccan Football Federation said in a statement that this decision came “in view of the differences and differing visions on the best way to prepare the national football team for the finals” of the World Cup.
The statement did not indicate the identity of the coach who will succeed Halilhodzic, stressing that the federation “will provide all means and capabilities to prepare the national team well in the horizon of its participation in the World Cup.”
He expressed his “gratitude for what coach Vahid Halilhodzic provided during the period in which he supervised the leadership of the national team, foremost of which was qualification for the Qatar 2022 World Cup with a promising young team full of great future ambitions.”
Khalilodjic had previously tested the same scenario with the Ivory Coast and Japan, which he led to the 2010 and 2018 World Cups, respectively, before he was dismissed from his post a few days before the start of the finals.
The coach said regarding his dismissal from Ivory Coast coaching a few months before the start of the 2010 World Cup, in an interview with Agence France-Presse, before the start of the African Nations Cup at the beginning of this year, “(my dismissal) was not just a lack of respect, but much more than that, it was disgusting, and it was not I totally accept it.”
“They (the Ivory Coast) sent me a fax, I didn’t even meet the president of the federation or even the secretary general. All they told me was ‘You didn’t win the African Cup of Nations and it’s over, with bad words and no decency.'”
Eight years later, he met the same fate, this time when he was sacked as coach of the Japanese national team regarding two months before the World Cup in Russia in 2018.
In this regard, he said, “They threw me in the trash. The method that was used to dismiss me shows complete disrespect for what I gave Japanese football.”
Today, it is the turn of the Moroccan Federation to terminate the contract with him, but “by mutual consent,” according to the statement issued by the first.
The Bosnian was able to retain his position following qualifying for the World Cup only once, when he led Algeria in the 2014 finals and reached the final price with it, in a first-of-its-kind achievement for the “Desert Foxes” team.
The 69-year-old coach succeeded in leading the Moroccan national team to qualify for the World Cup in Qatar 2022, where it faces Belgium, Croatia and Canada, but he entered into a dispute with the Moroccan Federation because of his refusal to call up the Chelsea winger Hakim Ziyech for disciplinary reasons.
There were conflicting statements between the president of the Moroccan Football Association, Faouzi Lekjaa and Khaliludjic, on the issue. Whenever the first came out to confirm the return of the Chelsea star, the Bosnian responded, clinging to the exclusion decision.
His departure has been the subject of frequent rumors in the local media in recent months, with reference to the possibility of replacing him with former Wydad Casablanca coach Walid Regragui.
Halilhodzic, who started his career with Morocco in the summer of 2019, was criticized by local media because of his tactical choices and the team’s squad, especially following his failure to go far in the African Nations Cup that was held in Cameroon early last year, as the team’s journey ended at the quarter-finals on Egypt hand (1-2 following extension).
The exclusionary decisions of the Bosnian coach were not limited to Ziyech only, but also affected the new Bayern Munich full-back Nasir Mazraoui, but the latter returned to the national team in late May to participate in the qualifiers for the African Cup of Nations 2023.
Halilhodzic had excluded Mazraoui and Ziyech in the last matches of the second round of the African qualifiers for the World Cup in Qatar, as well as the decisive round matches once morest the Democratic Republic of the Congo at the end of last March, for disciplinary reasons.
The Bosnian said last April that calling up Ziyech and Mazraoui was a “story and finished” for him because “the player who refuses to train, refuses to play, claims injuries, for me is a finished story.”
Ziyech, 29, announced in early February his retirement from international football following a dispute with Halilhodzic, who accused him of disrespect, which, he said, threatens the cohesion of the group, while Ziyech refused to reconcile with the coach and return to the national team.
The departure of Halilhodzic is likely to open the door to Ziyech’s return to the national team.