Barcelona were mourning the enforced exit of ailing coach Tito Vilanova yesterday, but there was also a sense the Spanish champions were prepared to move swiftly to appoint a successor and focus on preparations for next season.
Club president Sandro Rosell made the announcement late on Friday that Vilanova, who has been battling throat cancer for the past two years, needed more treatment that meant he would be unable to remain in charge of the first team.
A replacement for the 44-year-old, who was promoted from assistant coach to succeed Pep Guardiola at the end of the 2011-2012 season, would likely be announced early this week, Rosell said.
Many of the first team squad were at Rosell’s news conference, including World Player of the Year Lionel Messi, and the club cancelled a friendly they were due to play against Polish side Lechia Gdansk yesterday and suspended training until tomorrow.
Barcelona-based newspaper La Vanguardia reported that Joan Francesc Ferrer, known as “Rubi,” could be in line to take over, while daily Sport said the former Girona coach might be a temporary replacement.
Ferrer led Girona to the second division playoffs last season and was appointed Vilanova’s assistant for the coming campaign to help with technical analysis of Barca’s rivals.
Other names mentioned, all former Barca players, were Swansea’s Danish manager Michael Laudrup, Celta Vigo’s Spanish coach Luis Enrique and Dutchman Frank de Boer of Ajax Amsterdam.
Jupp Heynckes, who led Bayern Munich to an unprecedented treble of Bundesliga, German Cup and Champions League titles last season before being replaced by Guardiola, and Argentine Marcelo Bielsa, who was in charge at Athletic Bilbao until the end of last term, were also named as possible candidates.
German Heynckes, who turned 68 in May, had a stint at Athletic Bilbao before leading Barca’s arch rivals Real Madrid to the Champions League title in 1998.
His reputation was enhanced when Bayern thumped Barca 7-0 on aggregate in the semi-finals of Europe’s elite club competition last season and he was complimentary about the club after the second leg.
“I know Spanish football very well, especially Barcelona,” he told a news conference. “I know the way they like to play and their philosophy. Barca are not only an extraordinary club but a fantastic team.”
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