Legendary Italian coach facing unfamiliar relegation fight
When he was winning league titles as head coach of Real Madrid, Milan and Juventus, Fabio Capello never had to contemplate relegation.
But on his first foray in China, it has suddenly become a very real threat.
Capello, who won the UEFA Champions League in 1994 and led the national teams of England and Russia to the 2010 and 2014 World Cup championships, was appointed as head coach of Jiangsu Suning last month.
Fabio Capello, winner of the UEFA Champions League in 1994 who also helmed the national teams of England and Russia to the 2010 and 2014 World Cup championships, was named head coach of the Chinese Super League's Jiangsu Suning last month. AP File |
In three Chinese Super League games under one of the world's most famous coaches, Jiangsu has collected just one point. More worrying is that the Nanjing-based club failed to score in any of them.
The latest setback was a 1-0 home loss to Shanghai SIPG, which was missing Brazilian stars Oscar and Hulk through suspension. That loss left Jiangsu dead last in the 16-team league, three points adrift of safety.
"Maybe this is the most testing situation Capello has ever faced," Gary White, who led Shanghai Shenxin clear of relegation from China's League One in 2016, told Associated Press.
"He doesn't have a team full of world-class players to rely on. He must bring the big foreign stars and the Chinese players together and get them to play for each other. It is not about quality, it is about motivation."
The player stocks are still high at the club that finished runner-up in the 2016 season.
Bolstered by more than $80 million spent on Brazilian internationals Alex Teixeira and Ramires, Jiangsu pushed Luiz Felipe Scolari's Guangzhou Evergrande all the way for the title.
This season the stars remained at the club and firepower was added when Colombian international striker Roger Martinez joined the squad.
There were high hopes at the start of the season, but the expected title challenge hasn't materialized and Jiangsu started to slip down the standings, winning just once in the first third of the season. South Korean coach Choi Yong-soo resigned on June 1.
"With the experience Capello has, you would think he can turn it around," White said.
"This club should not be bottom of the league with the players it has. He has to get them to play for each other, the team, the fans and the city."
The expected upturn has yet to happen, though the 71 year-old Italian coach is trying to stay positive.
"We are improving," Capello said after the latest loss. "We are playing better all the time, but we are lacking confidence. Against Shanghai we played well and did not deserve to lose ... I can see the quality we have."
Capello has been in China for less than a month but much of the Chinese media has warned of the need for a result soon.
Capello can take heart from Felix Magath, the former Bayern Munich boss who took over a struggling Shandong Luneng in June last year.
"The CSL is a tough league and when you are in the relegation zone, confidence falls and when you are a big team with famous players, the other teams like to beat you," said Magath, who steered Shandong to safety with a margin of just two points.
This season Shandong is much-improved and currently sits in fifth.
For Capello, anywhere outside the bottom two when the season ends in October will do.
Associated Press