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Western Sydney Wanderers sack A-League coach Markus Babbel

Markus Babbel’s time was up at Western Sydney following Sunday night’s A-League loss to Perth Glory, with chief executive John Tsatsimas saying the club needed to act quickly to halt poor results. Little more than 12 hours after the Wanderers lost for the eighth time this season, 1-0 at Bankwest Stadium, the club pulled the trigger on the under-fire Babbel, axing the 47-year-old midway through his three-year contract.

The former Liverpool defender becomes the third A-League coach to be sacked this season after Marco Kurz at Melbourne Victory and Ernie Merrick at Newcastle. “It is unfortunate that we have needed to take this course of action because we have a great relationship with Markus,” Wanderers chairman Paul Lederer said in a statement.

“However we firmly believe that we have a great squad and the results are most definitely not reflective of the ability of the players at this club and certainly do not reflect the aspirations of the Western Sydney Wanderers Football Club. We have total faith in the group of players here at the Wanderers and look forward to pushing on with renewed vigour towards the finals series.”

Pressure had been building on Babbel for several months, with the Wanderers winning four games from 14 games this season for a total 10 wins, 23 losses and eight draws from his 41 games in charge. This campaign brought high expectations for the Wanderers with new training facilities and a move into the state-of-the-art Bankwest Stadium.

However, they remain ninth on the table, four points out of the top six and showing few signs of improvement. Babbel has consistently denied feeling anything but support from the club, and when asked if Sunday night was his final game in charge of the Wanderers said: “Don’t worry, I’m a fighter.”

Following the announcement on Monday morning, Babbel recorded a video message shared by the club, dismissing speculation there had been a rift in the coaching staff. He also paid tribute to the ‘amazing’ Wanderers fans and encouraged them to stick by the club, saying the past two years had been the best time of his life.

WS Wanderers FC
(@wswanderersfc)

A message from Markus Babbel.#WSW pic.twitter.com/I1bDop6oFK

January 20, 2020

“It was a pleasure from the first day until the end,” he said to fans. “You do an amazing job, you support the team and you have to understand this is still a young club, there’s a lot of improvement what the club has to go but support them.

“The club is top and especially you are top because you make this club special. I enjoyed every single home game because you were amazing and keep going with it, because I still believe this team can do something special but they need the 12th man. The team has the quality to beat every single team in this division but they need your help. From my side thank you so much for everything … I will miss you.”

But Tsatsimas confirmed conversations intensified following Sunday night’s heavily criticised defeat, prompting an emergency meeting with coaching staff at the club’s training base on Monday morning. It was there Babbel was sacked, with his assistant Jean-Paul de Marigny promoted to caretaker to try to arrest a miserable record of just one win in 11, and 23 losses from 41 games during the German’s reign.

“These conversations happened subsequent to last night. If you consider ‘where do you want to be at the end of the season?’, I think we need to make a call today to ensure that we’re active and responsive to where we’re at currently, to ensure that we’re in contention when it matters,” Tsatsimas said. “[Babbel is] a fantastic man and he certainly bought into the club in every sense, which makes the decision even harder.

“But one win in 11, particularly with what we believe is a very strong squad that should be contesting at the back end of the season, we believe that the opportunity is now right with a bye next weekend and the opportunity for JP to reset and make a concerted effort for the finals series.”

There are now two weeks before the Wanderers face Central Coast in Gosford on February 2, with assistant Jean-Paul de Marigny to take over as caretaker coach, assisted by former player Labinot Haliti.

Following Sunday’s loss, Wanderers captain Mitchell Duke acknowledged a growing frustration within the playing group, who were aware Babbel’s time had come. “There’s been a sense it came to the point a couple of weeks ago, he was like ‘I could either throw in the towel and give up or I can keep fighting’,” Duke told told Fox Sports.

“He said it’s not in his nature to give up. He wanted to keep going. He’s passionate, he loves football even now as a coach. He’s passionate and he doesn’t want to give up. He’s a fighter to the end. He’s made that clear and he wants us to look in the mirror and have that same demeanour about ourselves. Unfortunately we’re not quite putting it out on the pitch and she’s getting frustrating.”

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