Current:Home > FinanceSven-Goran Eriksson, Swedish soccer coach who was first foreigner to lead England team, dies at 76 -VisionFunds
Sven-Goran Eriksson, Swedish soccer coach who was first foreigner to lead England team, dies at 76
View
Date:2025-04-25 13:11:39
Sven-Goran Eriksson, the Swedish soccer manager who spent five years as England’s first ever foreign-born coach after making his name winning trophies at club level in Italy, Portugal and Sweden, died Monday. He was 76.
Eriksson died at home surrounded by his family, his agent Bo Gustavsson told The Associated Press.
His death followed eight months after he revealed he had been diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and had at most one year to live.
That news led to Eriksson receiving a surge of affection and tributes from his former players and clubs, a biographical documentary being made, and a visit to his favorite club Liverpool which invited him to be manager for the day at a charity game.
Fondly known as “Svennis” in his native Sweden, Eriksson had a modest, nine-year playing career before retiring at the age of 27 and embarking on what proved to be a nomadic coaching career that reached its peak when he was hired by England in 2001.
Within months, he led an underachieving team to a stunning signature win — 5-1 against Germany in Munich in a World Cup qualifying game.
Eriksson led what was regarded as a “golden generation” of players, including David Beckham, Steven Gerrard and Wayne Rooney, at the World Cups in 2002 and 2006 and got the team to the quarterfinals at both tournaments before elimination by Brazil and Portugal, respectively.
In the only other major tournament under Eriksson — the European Championship in 2004 — England was also ousted at the quarterfinal stage, by Portugal and via a penalty shootout like at the World Cup in 2006.
Eriksson’s tenure in one of world soccer’s most high-profile jobs was remembered almost as much for what happened off the field as on it. He had two affairs — one with Swedish TV personality Ulrika Jonsson and the other with a secretary at the Football Association, Faria Alam — which kept England’s gossip-hungry newspapers busy.
“My private life was not very private in England,” Eriksson said in 2018.
His time with England coincided with the emergence of a WAG (wives and girlfriends) culture, with the high-profile partners of the players — like Victoria Beckham — making headlines after Eriksson allowed them to come to the World Cup in Germany.
Eriksson later had brief spells in charge of the Mexico, Ivory Coast and Philippines national teams but the only silverware he earned came in the club game.
At Swedish team IFK Gothenburg, he won the league-and-cup double in 1982 and capped a stunning season by also capturing the now-defunct UEFA Cup.
Eriksson won back-to-back Portuguese titles in an initial two-year stint with Benfica (1982-84), as well as the Portuguese Cup in 1983, and returned there to reach the European Cup final in 1990 — losing to AC Milan — and win the league again in 1991.
It was in Italy where he became a major coaching name, primarily at Lazio after spells at Roma (1984-87) and Sampdoria (1992-97) — where he won Italian Cups — and Fiorentina (1987-89).
At Lazio from 1997-2001, he led to the team to only its second league title — in 2000 — after a late-season collapse by Juventus, as well as two Italian Cups and the last ever edition of the European Cup Winners’ Cup (in 1999).
Eriksson’s Lazio could have won Serie A in 1999, too, only to be beaten to the title by a point by AC Milan and also lost the final of the UEFA Cup in ’98.
“It was the best period of my career,” Eriksson said of winning seven trophies in a four-year stretch, at a time when Italy was rivaling Spain as the Europe’s top soccer league.
Eriksson benefited from the heavy spending of its owner, Sergio Cragnotti, at Lazio, with the Scudetto-winning team containing big names like Juan Sebastián Verón, Pavel Nedved and Sinisa Mihajlovic. It continued the following season when the Roman club, seeking to win the Champions League, spent a world-record fee to buy Hernan Crespo and also bought fellow Argentine striker Claudio López but Eriksson didn’t finish the season after being enticed by the England job.
He also had two year-long stints in club management in England, at Manchester City (2007-08) and Leicester (2010-11), either side of a spell as director of football at fourth-tier Notts County after it came briefly into the kind of money — following its purchase by a consortium from the Middle East — that could attract a high-profile name like Eriksson.
Bespectacled and a straight talker, Eriksson was popular with his players throughout his coaching career and was regarded as an excellent man-manager. He exuded a calm authority in the locker room and was never afraid of making big decisions, like selling Guiseppe Signori — the captain and star striker at Lazio — because Eriksson didn’t think the player was a good influence. Lazio won the league the following season.
Eriksson finished his coaching career by managing two clubs in China — Guangzhou and Shanghai SIPG — and more recently had the role of sporting director at Karlstad, a team in Sweden’s third division, before announcing in February 2023 that he’d be standing down for health reasons.
They became widely known 11 months later when Eriksson told Swedish Radio he had terminal cancer, saying: “At best I have maybe a year, at worst maybe a little less.”
“I could go and think about it all the time and sit at home and be grumpy and think I’m unlucky and so on,” he said. “I think that is easily done, that you end up there.
“No, look at things positively and don’t wallow in adversity. Because this is, of course, the biggest setback.”
___
Jan M. Olsen in Copenhagen, Denmark, contributed to this report
___
AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer
veryGood! (1)
Related
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- PHOTO COLLECTION: DNC Preparations
- East Palestine residents want more time and information before deciding to accept $600M settlement
- Ruth Johnson Colvin, who founded Literacy Volunteers of America, has died at 107
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Raiders go with Gardner Minshew over Aidan O'Connell as starting quarterback
- 4 children shot in Minneapolis shooting that police chief is calling ‘outrageous’
- Alabama sets November date for third nitrogen execution
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Beyoncé's Mom Tina Knowles Gives Rare Details on Twins Rumi and Sir
Ranking
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Here are the most popular ages to claim Social Security and their average monthly benefits
- 'Tiger King' made us feel bad. 'Chimp Crazy' should make us feel worse: Review
- Democrats seek to disqualify Kennedy and others from Georgia presidential ballots
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Friends' Creator Urges Fans to Remember Matthew Perry for His Legacy, Not His Death
- Political newcomers seek to beat U.S. House, Senate incumbents in Wyoming
- Got cold symptoms? Here’s when kids should take a sick day from school
Recommendation
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
Phil Donahue, whose pioneering daytime talk show launched an indelible television genre, has died
Firefighters significantly tame California’s fourth-largest wildfire on record
Ford, General Motors among 221,000 vehicles recalled: Check car recalls here
Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
Republicans are central in an effort to rescue Cornel West’s ballot hopes in Arizona
As viewers ask 'Why is Emily in Paris only 5 episodes?' creator teases 'unexpected' Part 2
Detroit boy wounded in drive-by shooting at home with 7 other children inside