Marseille’s plans rocked as coach Jorge Sampaoli leaves club

Argentine Jorge Sampaoli, who arrived in Marseille in February 2021, is no longer the coach of Olympique de Marseille, the club announced on Friday speaking of a “joint decision.” (AFP)
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Updated 01 July 2022
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Marseille’s plans rocked as coach Jorge Sampaoli leaves club

  • Sampaoli was popular with the club's very demanding fans
  • “Marseille and Jorge Sampaoli announce a mutual decision to end their collaboration,” the club said in a statement

MARSEILLE, France: Marseille’s preparations for next season were rocked Friday as coach Jorge Sampaoli left by mutual consent.
Sampaoli was popular with the club’s very demanding fans and guided 1993 Champions League winner Marseille back into the competition, after the southern club finished second in the French league to Paris Saint-Germain.
“Marseille and Jorge Sampaoli announce a mutual decision to end their collaboration,” the club said in a statement. “Since arriving in Marseille he invested himself fully in putting into a place a style of play and a fighting spirit which corresponded to Marseille.”
The 62-year-old Argentine had demanded a strong summer recruitment drive from club president Pablo Longoria and reportedly was unhappy with a lack of strong signings so far.
Sampaoli took over from Andre Villas-Boas midway through the 2020-21 campaign and the former Argentina coach quickly turned the club’s fortunes around.
The team’s work rate rose sharply as attitudes improved, and he started to get the best out of veteran playmaker Dimitri Payet again.
“Marseille wish to sincerely and very warmly thank Jorge Sampaoli for his work. After 16 months of working together, this work helped the club step up a level,” Marseille said in a statement. “We’re satisfied with how far we’ve come and the emotions we experienced together, but after a long period of reflection the two parties agreed to end this period.”


Teams on edge as F1 reset faces litmus test in Australia

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Teams on edge as F1 reset faces litmus test in Australia

  • Formula One’s new era faces first test in Melbourne

MELBOURNE: Formula One’s new era starts at this weekend’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix, where teams will leap into the unknown and grapple with sweeping technical changes under race conditions for the first time.

F1 has simultaneously overhauled chassis and power unit regulations for the first time in decades, posing a challenge for drivers and engineers alike while raising concerns about the quality of racing.

With near-parity between electrical and combustion engines and cars running on 100 percent advanced sustainable fuel, drivers gained some insight into the changes during winter testing. But all are in the dark about how the reset will play out when going wheel-to-wheel on race-day.

“I’m certainly more comfortable now than I was a couple of months ago, with how ‌to drive these ‌cars and how to try and get the most out of ‌them,” McLaren’s Oscar Piastri told reporters on Wednesday.

“But I think there’s still the saying of, ‘You don’t know what you don’t know.’”

Australian Piastri said McLaren thought they had the cars worked out two months ago, only to find they had “a whole bunch of stuff” they did not understand during winter testing.

With more power generated by electricity than last year’s engines, there is more emphasis on drivers needing to be tactical with energy deployment and regeneration.

The old drag reduction system has been replaced by a new overtake mode giving extra power for overtaking.

Four-time world champion Max Verstappen described the changes ‌as “like Formula E on steroids” and “anti-racing.”

Formula One chief executive Stefano ‌Domenicali defended them and assured fans there will still be plenty of thrills.

‘Unnatural’ driving

The changes may have ‌different effects at different circuits, leaving all teams to learn on the fly, week by ‌week.

Piastri said Sunday’s race at Albert Park would probably showcase the more “unnatural” parts of driving.

“You know, a lot more lift and coast, a lot more kind of just driving to maximize the power unit,” he said.

“You’ve got power units that are reducing in power down the straights at different points. And there’s a ‌lot of unknowns, a lot of challenges in there.”

The new regulations raised hopes of a more open championship and the prospect of a disruptor team emerging to force change at the top.

But pre-season testing in Bahrain hinted at a familiar top four, with Ferrari, Mercedes, Red Bull and McLaren all performing.

Audi team principal Jonathan Wheatley said the gap between the “best and the rest” might only widen.

“I think it’s going to be a very different year in terms of the competitiveness in the sport,” he told Reuters. “We’re already seeing the gap between the fastest teams and the slowest teams, but larger than it’s been in the last few years.”

Whatever the pecking order, F1 race tracks will be more crowded with the addition of the new Cadillac team although there may be more breathing room at Albert Park given Aston Martin’s pre-season troubles.

Despite the technical guidance of Adrian Newey, who joined from Red Bull, the Honda-powered team completed few laps during winter testing and have reliability problems.

The AMR26 cars will be in Australia — something of a relief for F1 management — but may only race for a few laps before retiring.