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Eriksson’s England era became a celebrity circus – but he wanted to enjoy life and was never bitter | World News

Sven-Göran Eriksson doubted so much whether England could ever have a foreign manager that he considered an initial approach a joke. 

Intrigued eventually by the ground-breaking opportunity, rather than being deterred by the indignation, the Swede would launch the Three Lions into five of the most frenzied years in their history.

Everything belied his suave demeanour – from allowing a celebrity culture to consume the team to being an unlikely headline-making lothario himself and, even, showing passion while delivering results for his adopted country.

It was a blessing and burden to inherit a Golden Generation of talent of David Beckham, Wayne Rooney and co – captivating the country with dazzling one-off displays but unable to deliver when it mattered most under the weight of expectation and pressure.

It is the failure to overcome the constant quarter-final barrier and lift a trophy that shaped Eriksson’s England legacy where football too often seemed secondary.

Read more:
Former England manager dies
Updates as royal leads tributes to Swede

England World Cup team head coach Sven Goran Eriksson signs his autograph on a football game table prior to a press conference near Seogwipo on the South Korean island of Jeju Wednesday, May 22, 2002. England will play with Sweden, Argentina, and Nigeria in Group F at the FIFA 2002 World Cup in Japan. (AP photo/Adam Butler)
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Eriksson at the 2002 World Cup. Pic: AP

But the Eriksson era did provide a mirror to the nation at the start of the new millennium.

How the public’s ravenous appetite to gaze into the private lives of the stars – and the legalities of intrusive tabloid reporting – was stretched to extremes, and only unearthed years later.

How patriotism could seem parochial or xenophobic – just as the Premier League was the platform for England opening up to the world.

File photo dated 16-04-2002 of Sven Goran Eriksson and Michael Owen. Former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson has died at the age of 76. Issue date: Monday August 26, 2024.
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Eriksson and striker Michael Owen in 2002. Pic: PA


For a coach arriving after league and cup wins with Lazio, it proved perplexing that his suitability focused on his nationality over coaching credentials.

“We’ve sold our birthright down the fjord to a nation of seven million skiers and hammer throwers who spend half their lives in darkness.”

The Daily Mail headline set the tone for his introductory news conference.

Lazio coach,Sven Goran-Eriksson, is thrown up into the air by his team during the official party to celebrate Lazio winning Italy's soccer championship at Rome's Olympic stadium
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Eriksson is thrown up into the air by his team during the official party to celebrate Lazio winning Italy’s football championship. Pic: Reuters

Sven-Goran Eriksson before the match.
Pic Reuters
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Sven-Goran Eriksson in 2019. Pic: Reuters

He did try to sing God Save The Queen, feeling emotional as he realised the national standing he quickly assumed from 2001.

And doubters – some at least – were won over spectacularly on the turf of England’s greatest rival.

A 5-1 humiliation of Germany in Munich was followed a month later by another iconic moment of Eriksson’s reign – Beckham’s free kick that sealed a spot at the 2002 World Cup.

File photo dated 19-11-2002 of Queen Elizabeth II meeting Sven-Goran Eriksson. Former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson has died at the age of 76. Issue date: Monday August 26, 2024.
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Queen Elizabeth II meeting Eriksson. Pic: PA

But the highs came in qualifying, falling short – always at the quarter-finals stage – in his three tournaments.

Too often it seemed more about fame than football around this England generation.

The high – or low – point of that came at his second and final World Cup in 2006.

Sven-Goran Eriksson at the 2006 World Cup with England. Pic: PA
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Sven-Goran Eriksson at the 2006 World Cup with England. Pic: PA

As if managing Beckham, Rooney, Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard wasn’t challenging enough, this was the era of the WAGs.

The celebrity circus around the Baden-Baden team base in Germany saw the players’ wives and girlfriends indulging in the media attention.

The insatiable appetite for a trophy matched the front page fodder the team – and their manager – provided.

England football manager Sven-Goran Eriksson and his partner Nancy Dell'Olio.
Pic: PA
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England football manager Sven-Goran Eriksson and his then partner Nancy Dell’Olio in 2006. Pic: PA

Eriksson wanted to enjoy life but his privacy was exploited by the dark arts of tabloids.

Intimate details of affairs that the papers had a role in playing matchmaker to.

“I met Ulrika Jonsson on 8 December 2001, at some party hosted by the Daily Express, or maybe it was the Daily Star,” he recalled.

“The FA wanted me to travel around to various newspapers to be courteous and meet the editors. I visited the News Of The World too.”

File photo dated 18-05-2002 of David Beckham and Sven-Goran Eriksson. Former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson has died at the age of 76. Issue date: Monday August 26, 2024.
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David Beckham and Eriksson. Pic: PA

It was the paper – closed in scandal by Rupert Murdoch in 2011 – he would blame for ending his England reign.

The notorious ‘fake sheikh’ had been used to trap him in a fictitious approach by Aston Villa ahead of the 2006 World Cup.

“I was extremely disappointed because I was sacked because of that,” Eriksson said. “I never accepted or understood that the News Of The World is so important… because I told the people at the FA – you believe in them or me.”

England coach Sven-Goran Eriksson comments on tomorrow's friendly soccer match between England and Denmark to be played in Copenhagen during a press conference at the national football stadium in Copenhagen, Denmark, Tuesday, Aug. 16, 2005. (AP Photo/ Kim Nielsen/POLFOTO)DENMARK OUT
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Pic: AP

Who he could believe and trust was called into question by what he only later discovered was phone hacking.

Voicemail interceptions were linked to being behind the Daily Mirror’s revelation of his relationship with TV presenter Jonsson – another Swede who made it big in Britain.

“I think the football media was rather good. Sometimes they tried to kill me,” he said. “The other part of the media, that was a little bit of a surprise for me, because I wasn’t used to that.”

But he was never bitter – returning to English football to manage Manchester City just before the influx of Abu Dhabi wealth, dropping into the fourth division during a bizarre, brief spell as Notts County’s director of football and taking on a second-tier job at Leicester.

File photo dated 26-07-2007 of Sven-Goran Eriksson with Martin Petrov and Geovanni. Former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson has died at the age of 76. Issue date: Monday August 26, 2024.
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Eriksson in 2007 as Man City boss. Pic: PA

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The breadth of managerial roles after England – at three Chinese clubs, and the Mexico, Ivory Coast and Philippines national teams – showed Eriksson was happiest in the dugout.

“As a player I was not good at all,” he recalled. “I was not good enough to play first division in Sweden well, so the best decision I ever took in my professional career was when Tord Grip came to me and said, ‘It’s better you stop playing and be my assistant coach.’

“And that was when I was 27. So I had much better luck as a coach than a player for sure.”

Swedish coach Sven-Goran Eriksson poses for photos during his first training session for Chinese Super League club Guangzhou in 2013.
Pic AP
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Eriksson poses for photos during his first training session for Chinese Super League club Guangzhou in 2013. Pic: AP

The affection following Eriksson revealing his cancer diagnosis in January 2024 even allowed an emotional farewell to English football at Anfield by fulfilling a wish to manage Liverpool, as revealed on Sky News.

And assessments of his England reign seem more dispassionate as the trophy drought has gone on.

His immediate successor – Steve McClaren – didn’t qualify for Euro 2008 – and it took 12 years for an England men’s manager to win a knockout game.

File photo dated 01-07-2006 of Sven-Goran Eriksson after defeat at the 2006 World Cup. Former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson has died at the age of 76. Issue date: Monday August 26, 2024.
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Eriksson after defeat at the 2006 World Cup. Pic: PA


But in his dying days, Eriksson was still thinking back to the 2006 World Cup.

“We should have done better,” he said. “So the criticism I and the team took after that tournament I think was fair.”

But what he could still never accept was why some questioned his right to ever have the job.

England's Wayne Rooney (R) talks to manager Sven-Goran Eriksson.
Pic: Reuters
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England’s Wayne Rooney (R) talks to manager Sven-Goran Eriksson in 2006. Pic: Reuters

And while breaking new ground by becoming England’s first foreign manager, the nationality debate endures whenever an FA appointment is needed.

“There were people who did not like I was not English,” he lamented in retirement.

Team GB’s Josh Kerr misses out on Olympic gold in 1500m final despite finishing ahead of bitter rival | UK News

Josh Kerr narrowly missed out on Olympic gold in the 1500m final despite finishing ahead of bitter rival Jakob Ingebrigtsen.

The Edinburgh-born runner claimed silver after being pipped on the line by USA’s Cole Hocker.

The race was billed as a two-horse race with Ingebrigtsen, but Hocker’s sprint in the final straight gave him a shock gold.

Norwegian Ingebrigtsen finished fourth despite leading for most of the race.

There had been much hype beforehand about Kerr and Ingebrigtsen’s apparent dislike for each other after trading barbs over the past year or so.

Ingebrigtsen previously said he could beat Kerr “blindfolded” despite Kerr outrunning him at last year’s World Championships.

Cole Hocker snatched a surprise gold from the two hot favourites. Pic: AP
Image:
Cole Hocker snatched a surprise gold from the two hot favourites. Pic: AP

Other medals for Team GB on Tuesday were a silver for the men’s team sprint in the velodrome and a bronze for 16-year-old Sky Brown in the skateboarding.

More on Paris 2024 Olympics

Boxer Lewis Richardson already has a bronze but hopes to secure at least a silver when he goes in the middleweight semi-final just before 9pm.

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UK weather: Bitter winter temperatures set to return next week – and there could be snow | UK News

Parts of the UK are likely to see weather warnings early next week, as bitter winter temperatures return for a brief time.

There are currently no Met Office weather warnings in place but the UK Health Security Agency has issued a cold weather alert.

Both organisations say all parts of England will experience cold weather from 1am on Monday until midnight on Wednesday.

Some regions could even see snow.

Dr Agostinho Sousa, head of extreme events and health protection at UKHSA, said: “During periods like this, it is important to check in on family, friends and relatives who may be more vulnerable to the cold weather, as it can have a serious impact on health.

“If you have a pre-existing medical condition or are over the age of 65, it is important to try and heat your home to at least 18C if you can.”

It comes as people continue to struggle with high energy bills, and the UKHSA offered some advice to people trying to stay warm.

Several layers of thinner clothing will keep you warmer than one thick layer, they said.

Drinking hot drinks and eating hot food also helps.

Check the 5-day forecast for where you live

‘A distinctly wintry feel to our weather next week’

Chris Almond, deputy chief meteorologist at the Met Office, said: “Although we’ve moved into meteorological spring there will be a distinctly wintry feel to our weather next week.

“Very cold air will spread across the UK bringing snow showers even to sea level in the north on Monday and these snow showers could spread further south on Tuesday.

“With freezing overnight temperatures and the risk of ice, it is likely weather warnings will be issued for Monday and Tuesday once the detail of potential impacts becomes clearer, so keep an eye on the Met Office forecast.”

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It comes after England had its driest February in 30 years, according to the Met Office.

The UK saw less than half of its average rainfall for the month, at 45%, with just 43.4mm.