Eto'o skips new Cameroon coach unveiling ceremony
(FILES) Germinal's coach Marc Brys is pictured during the first league football match Charleroi vs Germinal Beerschot on March 31, 2007, in Charleroi. Belgian Marc Brys has been appointed Rigobert Song's replacement as Cameroon's national team coach, the country's sports ministry announced on April 2, 2024. (Photo by VIRGINIE LEFOUR / BELGA / AFP)
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Cameroon's new
coach Marc Brys penned a contract on Monday but the Belgian's appointment by
the government remains contentious as the football federation did not attend
the signing ceremony.
Brys has been
handed a two-and-a-half-year contract by Cameroon’s sports ministry but the
federation (FECAFOOT) was conspicuous by its absence at the event in Yaounde.
Last week,
FECAFOOT criticised the unilateral decision of sports minister Narcisse Mouelle
Kombito to appoint the 61-year-old Brys, who has no prior experience as a
national team coach and has not previously worked on the African continent.
FECAFOOT
president Samuel Eto’o issued a statement on Monday, excusing himself from the
unveiling event.
“We thank you
for inviting us to the ceremony. Following this, we inform you of the fact that
we received the letter two hours before the said ceremony,” wrote Eto’o.
“Unfortunately,
we are busy organising the funeral of our late Dad, and for this reason we will
not be able to attend presence at the ceremony.”
His father’s
funeral is to be held at the weekend.
Eto’o balked
at Brys’ appointment and is now in a deepening standoff with the minister.
In Cameroon,
the government has long paid the salary of the national team coach and
therefore held powerful sway over FECAFOOT’s affairs, even if such state
interference is frowned upon by world football’s governing body FIFA.
Any heightened
dispute risks a potential ban from international competition for Cameroon, one
of the heavyweights of African football.
FECAFOOT held
an emergency meeting on Saturday and asked Eto’o to propose an alternative
coach for the national team.
Earlier on the
weekend, the minister had defended the appointment, saying he had acted in
accordance with national and international regulations.
In a letter to
FECAFOOT, Kombi said his ministry’s appointment of coaching staff “in no way
affects the autonomy of FECAFOOT and does not violate any of the ‘supranational
regulations”.


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