IVORY COAST COACH:
Henri Michel
Frenchman Henri Michel has made a career coaching African
teams. The Ivory Coast is his fourth team, after directing
Cameroon (1994 World Cup), Morocco (1998) and Tunisia
(2002), although he quit the north African team in protest
only 67 days before the start of the competition in
Korea and Japan after the Tunisian Football Federation
fired Frenchman Albert Rust. He also coached the United
Arab Emirates from 2000-01. Michel's greatest success
came with France, directing the French to the 1984 Olympic
gold medal and the National Team to a third-place finish
at Mexico '86.
Born on Oct. 29, 1947, Michel played midfield for Aix
and Nantes and made fifty-eight appearances for the
national side, including playing in the 1978 World Cup.
Before turning to coaching, he began his coaching career
with Paris St. Germain and Al-Nasr. He replaced countryman
Robert Nouzaret, who resigned in March 2004. "I'm
very proud to have taken over this Côte d'Ivoire
team," Michel said several months later. "It's
a fine side, with so much potential that I won't understand
it if we don't qualify for the World Cup. It's a very
exciting challenge." He is a bit shy of the spotlight.
Michel did not attend the presidential gala after qualifying.
"The players, who are the real heroes, must be
allowed to enjoy this moment with the people of Côte
d'Ivoire," he explained on French television. They
have earned the right." Michel has been under intense
criticism and scrutiny by the Ivory Coast media and
fans, who do not always comprehend his tactics and team
selections. In fact, some within the Ivory Coast Football
Federation reportedly harbor the same feelings.
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