Czech Republic sack coach Hasek after Faroes flop

Czech Republic sack coach Hasek after Faroes flop
Czech Republic’s coach Ivan Hasek reacts during a World Cup 2026 group L qualifying match against Croatia at the Opus Arena in Osijek, Croatia, on June 9, 2025. (AP/File)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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Czech Republic sack coach Hasek after Faroes flop

Czech Republic sack coach Hasek after Faroes flop
  • “We have terminated cooperation with Ivan Hasek as of today,” FACR head David Trunda told reporters
  • An “interim coach” is meanwhile likely to lead the team in their last World Cup qualifier at home to Gibraltar in November

PRAGUE: The Czech football federation (FACR) announced the sacking of national team coach Ivan Hasek on Wednesday, following a humiliating 2-1 defeat in a 2026 World Cup qualifier against the Faroe Islands.
Seeking their first World Cup appearance since 2006, the Czechs are not even completely sure of a berth in the playoffs next March — a situation compounded by their loss in Torshavn on Sunday.
Croatia top Group L, three points ahead of the Czech Republic, and the 2018 World Cup runners-up also have a game in hand on their rivals.
The Faroes lie one point behind the Czechs, with both having one match remaining in their campaign.
“We have terminated cooperation with Ivan Hasek as of today,” FACR head David Trunda told reporters.
Trunda added that the FACR would now look for a new coach, possibly a foreigner.
An “interim coach” is meanwhile likely to lead the team in their last World Cup qualifier at home to Gibraltar in November.
Hasek started his second stint as national team coach ahead of Euro 2024, at which the Czechs were knocked out in the group stage.
Pundits criticized the 62-year-old former midfielder for his unattractive style of play, while he bemoaned having no players coming even close to the level of former Czech greats such as Pavel Nedved or Tomas Rosicky.
Hasek came under heavy fire following a 5-1 defeat in a World Cup qualifier in Croatia in June.
As a player. Hasek scored five goals in 56 games for Czechoslovakia and led the country as captain to the World Cup quarter-finals in Italy in 1990.
As a coach, he took Sparta Prague to back-to-back Czech league titles in 2000 and 2001.
Since then he has had a nomadic coaching career taking him to France, Japan, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and even the Lebanese national team.
His first stint as the Czech national team coach was in 2009 when he oversaw just five games.


Kyrgios targets ‘miracle’ Australian Open return after knee improves

Kyrgios targets ‘miracle’ Australian Open return after knee improves
Updated 06 November 2025
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Kyrgios targets ‘miracle’ Australian Open return after knee improves

Kyrgios targets ‘miracle’ Australian Open return after knee improves
  • Kyrgios has played just five singles matches in the last three years because of multiple surgeries on wrist and then knee injuries
  • Kyrgios is due to face women’s world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka on Dec. 28 in a rare “Battle of the Sexes” exhibition match in Dubai

SYDNEY: Nick Kyrgios said Thursday his long-term knee injury had suddenly improved, giving him hopes of a “miracle” comeback in time for the Australian Open in January.

Kyrgios, 30, has played just five singles matches in the last three years because of multiple surgeries on wrist and then knee injuries.

“In the last month, I don’t know what it is. I was with my masseuse and physio last night and something really has changed with my knee,” the 2022 Wimbledon finalist Kyrgios told the Australian Associated Press.

“It’s not swelling. It’s not feeling bad after a session.

“I don’t know whether to call it a miracle or anything, but my knee feels like it’s gotten younger by a couple of years.”

Kyrgios said he could not explain why, after months of struggling with rehabilitation, there had been such an unexpected and rapid improvement.

“I don’t want to jinx it, but something in it has gone, kind of allowed me to put three, four days of training together on court for an hour-and-a-half, two hours and be able to actually recover and then build on that,” said Kyrgios

“So that’s been really exciting and I haven’t really told anyone. I have a new lease on life on court.”

Kyrgios, whose ranking has slid to 652 in the world because of his inactivity, would need a wild card from organizers for the Australian Open.

He has not played since losing in the second round of the Miami Open in March.

Kyrgios is due to face women’s world No. 1 Aryna Sabalenka on Dec. 28 in a rare “Battle of the Sexes” exhibition match in Dubai, organizers said this week.