O'Neil succeeds Rosenior as Strasbourg coach
Wolverhampton Wanderers' English head coach Gary O’Neil smiles as he arrives for the English Premier League football match between Brighton and Hove Albion and Wolverhampton Wanderers at the American Express Community Stadium in Brighton, southern England on January 22, 2024. One young English coach succeeds another as Gary O’Neil has been appointed to French Ligue1 club of Strasbourg, the Alsatian club announced on January 7, 2026, the day after Liam Rosenior’s departure for Chelsea.
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Gary O'Neil has replaced Liam Rosenior as Strasbourg coach,
the French club announced on Wednesday.
Former Bournemouth and Wolves boss O'Neil heads to France
after Rosenior left the modest Ligue 1 outfit on Tuesday for Premier League
side Chelsea.
The 42-year-old had a playing career including spells at
Portsmouth and Middlesbrough and represented England under-21s.
"I'm excited to get started and proud to be part of
this fantastic club," O'Neil said in a Strasbourg statement.
"We have an exciting group of players and clear
ambitious objectives for the season.
"My focus is on working hard with the squad to give
everything for the club's success," he added.
O'Neil takes over with the Alsatians, who won their sole
French title in 1979, in seventh place in Ligue 1 but without a win in the
league since November 9.
They are top of the Conference League table, having beaten
the likes of Crystal Palace and Aberdeen.
During his time in the Premier League O'Neil guided
Bournemouth to top-flight safety and took over at Wolves after Julen
Lopetegui's chaotic departure.
He left Molineux in December 2024 with the club in 19th
place, having won just twice that season.
O'Neil's first game in charge of Strasbourg will be
Saturday's French Cup last 32 game at fourth-tier Avranches.
"I am very happy to welcome Gary O'Neil to
Racing," Strasbourg president Marc Keller said.
"He is a demanding and recognised coach, with a modern
approach to football that is fully part of the continuity of our sports
project," he added.
Rosenior's move to Chelsea has been shrouded in controversy
with the Blues and Strasbourg owned by the same consortium, BlueCo, who bought
the three-time French Cup winners in June, 2023.
Strasbourg fans called for Keller to leave his role due to
Rosenior's departure which followed the equally unpopular announcement club
captain Emmanuel Emegha would head to Stamford Bridge next season.
Rosenior guided Strasbourg to seventh in the table last
term, a marked improvement on his predecessor Patrick Vieira under whom they
had finished 13th.
Strasbourg's last piece of silverware was lifting the fourth
of their League Cup trophies in 2019.
"Liam Rosenior's move marks yet another humiliating
step in Racing's subservience to Chelsea," the Strasbourg Supporters'
Federation said on Facebook.
"The problem goes far beyond the mid-season sporting
impact and the ambitions of a young coach. It is structural, it is the future
of French club football that is at stake.
"Every additional contortion by Marc Keller, every extra minute spent at the helm of the club, is an insult to the tremendous work accomplished before 2023," it added.


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