74° F
|
|

Gullit Resigns As Galaxy Coach; Lalas Out As Well
John Nadel, The Associated Press
August 12, 2008
LOS ANGELES -- Ruud Gullit has resigned as coach of the
slumping Los Angeles Galaxy for personal reasons, and
president/general manager Alexi Lalas also is out of a job.
"We are stepping up and doing what we need to do to straighten
this thing out," Galaxy investor/operator Tim Leiweke told The
Associated Press on Monday in announcing the changes.
The Galaxy, led by English star David Beckham and Landon
Donovan, are on a seven-match winless streak as they play Chivas
USA on Thursday night.
"There are two good people that for different reasons aren't
part of this organization today, and that's a shame," Leiweke
said. "The fact is, the players have to look deep inside
themselves and understand they have to be responsible for some of
this.
"Am I angry we find ourselves in the situation we find
ourselves in? Yes. This is not a fun week. The Galaxy hasn't made
the playoffs for a couple years. Punting on this season is not
acceptable. It starts Thursday."
Much was expected when Beckham joined the Galaxy last season.
But he was limited to five games because of injuries and the Galaxy
went 9-14-7 for 34 points, and were eliminated from playoff
contention on the season's final day.
The Galaxy were in pretty good shape this season before the
recent winless streak left them at 6-8-5 with just 23 points.
Gullit will be succeeded on an interim basis by 37-year-old Cobi
Jones, a first-year assistant who retired following last season
after spending his entire pro career with the Galaxy. The
45-year-old Gullit signed a three-year contract last November,
making him one of the MLS' highest-paid coaches.
"I think this was a tough move professionally and personally
for Ruud," Leiweke said. "I don't think it was working out for
him and his family. I have no issues with Ruud, I appreciate what
he's done for us. And we move on."
Leiweke, the president and CEO of AEG, said Jones was the
interim coach "for right now."
"I appreciate Cobi's stepping in," Leiweke said. "The one
guy's loyalty and passion over there I don't question is his. I
think we have eliminated any and all excuses now. No one can point
any fingers."
Leiweke said no potential head coaches have been contacted.
"But we have a short list," he said. "We respect Cobi, he's
stepping in and filling a void. Whether or not Cobi's comfortable
being the head coach or whether or not he has the experience, we'll
play that one by ear. Cobi certainly will have a voice in this."
Leiweke said he hopes Jones will remain with the team no matter
how the search for a coach goes.
"Hopefully Cobi feels the same way," Leiweke said. "That
said, we'll see where we go with the head coaching position."
Leiweke said he didn't know whether a permanent head coach will
be named before the end of the season.
"I don't think we're going to mandate or dictate that," he
said. "We certainly could make a quick decision if that's what's
necessary. My guess is a lot of people will want to throw their
name in the ring here."
The 37-year-old Lalas' contract runs out at the end of the
season.
"I think because of the Ruud situation, it was an opportunity
to once and for all look for a fresh start," Leiweke said.
"Alexi's been with us a long time. I'm very appreciative of
everything he's done for the Galaxy. That one is painful. We
haven't made the playoffs for two years running, and we're headed
for a third year. You can't blame Alexi entirely. I do think we
need a fresh start."
Leiweke said Tom Payne, who has served as Lalas' assistant, will
run the business side of the team. Paul Bravo, the director of
soccer, will work with Jones on personnel decisions, he said.
Lalas left a similar position with the New York Red Bulls to
join the Galaxy on April 17, 2006, as the successor to Doug
Hamilton, who died of a heart attack.
Copyright © 2008, The Associated Press
|