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Aguirre replaces Eriksson at Mexico helm
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The Mexican football federation said Friday it had appointed former coach
Javier Aguirre as their new handler a day after sacking ex-England manager
Sven-Goran Eriksson.
Aguirre, 50, coached the Mexicans at the 2002 World Cup before moving to
Spanish side Osasuna and thereafter to Atletico Madrid, who dispensed with
his services in February.
Eriksson, 61, was fired after barely ten months in the job following
Wednesday's disappointing 3-1 loss to Honduras in a World Cup qualifier,
which came after a previous defeat regional rivals the United States.
In between, the Mexicans enjoyed a home success over Costa Rica but the two
away reverses left them struggling to make a berth in South Africa at next
year's finals a place below the third guaranteed slot.
The fourth-placed team must come through against the fifth best from South
America in a playoff.
Media reports said Thursday that Eriksson is in line to receive a handsome
payoff.
"His sacking will cost the Mexican Federation 3.5 million dollars," reported
El Universal daily.
Eriksson, who was sacked after just 13 matches at the helm having only taken
the post last June, was earning a reported seven million dollars a year.
When he stepped down as England boss after the last World Cup he received a
six-million pound (8.5 million dollar) golden parachute.
A year later he took the reins at Manchester City but he was relieved of his
post after a single midtable season and then to general surprise crossed the
Atlantic to replace the sacked Hugo Sanchez.
El Universal suggested that not qualifying could cost in the region of 500
million dollars in potential commercial receipts.
Eriksson's personal manager Athole Still meanwhile told Sky Sports News he
thought taking the Mexican job was a mistake.
"We discussed it and I think the big decision for Sven was getting back into
the World Cup and going to South Africa. Also because his son works in
soccer schools over there and Sven is connected so there were family issues
there.
"But I felt that he should have stayed in Europe," said Still, who denied
any contact between the Swede and English Premiership strugglers Portsmouth.
Still suggested Eriksson's next port of call would be with a big-name club
but added that "if the right job came up he might go for another
international team again."
Eriksson won a swathe of honours with IFK Gothenburg in his homeland before
further successes with Portugal's Benfica and then in Italy with AS Roma,
Sampdoria and Lazio, with whom he won Serie A.
He then took the England job, guiding the 1966 world champions to two World
Cup quarter-finals and the same stage of Euro 2004.
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