Citation (Samou @ May 23 2011, 00:22)

Le club lui a quand même laisser terminer sa saison,on a quand fait notre pire serie depuis plus de 15 ans et il est rester,y'en a qui aurait degager pour moins que sa en cours de saison (cf Scolari).
Sauf que Scolari,il avait une partie du vestiaire à dos, lui même l'a révélé.
Citation (KB24LAL @ May 23 2011, 01:04)

Andre Villas-Boas est le favori selon les bookmakers anglais, il est annoncé comme le nouveau Mourinho, les suivants sont dans l'ordre José Mourinho, Guus Hiddink, Harry Redknapp, Pep Guardiola, Marco Van Basten, Didier Deschamps, Frank Rijkaard, Rafa Benitez.
moi perso j'aimerais bien Van Basten, en sachant que Hiddink ou Mourinho c'est quasiment mort.
Parmi tout cela, tout ceux qui sont en contrat, on peut les jarter.
Hiddink reste à le convaincre et qui foirre avec la Turquie.
Benitez, son echec interiste le plombe, veto de Torres
Redknapp, le Dechamps anglais, le choix des journalistes pas du board pas assez clinquant
Rijkaard, rien gagner sans Ten Cate, c'est soit les 2, soit rien
A ce jour, les favoris
Hiddink
Van Basten
Moi perso, je suis favorable à Lippi avec comme adjoint Zola, comme en 2009...
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Citation
Chelsea sack manager Carlo Ancelotti and eyes Guus Hiddink after club falls 'short of expectations'
Chelsea last night sacked manager Carlo Ancelotti barely an hour after their season ended at Everton.
By Jason Burt, Deputy Football Correspondent6:00AM BST 23 May 2011
Follow Jason Burt on Twitter
The 51 year-old was informed of the decision by chief executive Ron Gourlay and the club are now stepping up their efforts to hire Turkey coach Guus Hiddink as his replacement.
The other possibilities appear to be an astonishing return for Jose Mourinho or, more remotely, a move for Fulham manager Mark Hughes, potentially to work with Gianfranco Zola as his assistant.
The brutal swiftness of the sacking - it was reminiscent of West Ham United’s treatment of Avram Grant last Sunday - was not unexpected by sources close to Ancelotti and Roman Abramovich, even if it appeared to take club officials by surprise.
At 7.10pm last night supporters who subscribe to the club’s text message service were sent an ‘alert’ quoting Ancelotti saying: “We haven’t arranged a meeting about my future.” At 7.52pm they received a second text which read: “CFC can confirm that Carlo Ancelotti parted company with the club today. The owner and board thank him for his work.”
Last night, Ancelotti reiterated that he wanted to take a new job in England. “I accept and respect Chelsea’s decision,” he said. “I spent two fantastic years at this club. I think did a good job. Now I will think about my future, but I would prefer to stay in England and in the Premier League.”
Ancelotti’s trusted assistant, Bruno Demichelis, will also leave the club.
Earlier, Ancelotti had attended his normal post-match press conference and was even left, embarrassingly, to state again that he expected to meet with the club this week. He was not afforded even that courtesy, with Gourlay speaking to him as he left Goodison Park’s media room.
In a subsequent statement the club added the reason for the sacking: “This season’s performances have fallen short of expectations and the club feels the time is right to make this change ahead of next season’s preparations.” The squad were informed as they departed for Liverpool airport having lost the final game of the season to Everton 1-0.
The Daily Telegraph was the first to disclose last autumn that Ancelotti was set to leave Chelsea at the end of this season.
Having won the Premier League and FA Cup in his first year, the first time the club had won the double, he led Chelsea to second place in the league in what has been a troubled campaign. However it has been the second failure in the Champions League - going out in the quarter-finals to Manchester United - which has ultimately ended the reign of a manager who has won that competition four times, twice as a player.
Ancelotti was left embarrassed by the club’s decision to sack assistant Ray Wilkins as well as their approach to transfer dealings. With sporting director Frank Arnesen having decided to leave - he officially joins Hamburg this week - Ancelotti had also lost his closest ally at Chelsea.
The Italian transformed Chelsea’s playing style, making them far more attractive, while the way he conducted himself helped change the perception of the club.
As it is, Abramovich is now set to hire his seventh manager in seven seasons and is once more hurting Chelsea’s credibility. In their statement the club added: “Chelsea’s long-term objectives and ambition remain unchanged and we will now be concentrating our efforts on identifying a new manager.”
That task will focus on persuading Hiddink to leave Turkey, which may become possible after the country’s crucial Euro 2012 qualifier in Belgium on June 3. The Dutchman, who is close to Abramovich, has never broken a contract but if Turkey were out of contention for next summer’s tournament it would be easier for him to leave.
However Hiddink, who enjoyed a successful spell as caretaker at Chelsea before Ancelotti was hired, has also suggested that he may not be keen to take a full-time manager’s job and it may be that Chelsea can persuade him to return only as a technical director working alongside a younger coach.
Discussions have taken place with Zola about a role with the club although sources have ruled out hiring the likes of Marco Van Basten or Frank Rijkaard.
It may be too expensive - and early - to hire Andre Villas-Boas but he is being discussed. The 33 year-old wants to take Porto into the Champions League and any prospective employer would need to pay £13 million under a release clause this year - it would be far less next summer.
There is the prospect of Chelsea trying something different. Hughes, a former Chelsea player, has prospered in London this season at Fulham and Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp has also been discussed.
And then there’s the big one. It had appeared impossible that Abramovich would contemplate turning to Mourinho - not least because he left with such a big pay-off.
But there’s one intriguing prospect. Would Mourinho consider leaving Real Madrid to ensure that Villas-Boas, with whom he no longer speaks having once been so close, does not get the job? It is possible, although highly unlikely.
But, then again, this is Chelsea
Citation
The now ex-Chelsea manager left his post-match press conference at Goodison Park, to be told by chief executive Ron Gourlay that he was “parting company” with his employer.
The reason for the timing? Chelsea wanted Ancelotti to know first and then the players would be told before they went on their summer holidays. How kind. Gourlay, Ancelotti and the squad then travelled to the airport to take their flight back to Gatwick. It must have been an awkward journey