| Fabio Capello is looking for a return to club management after stepping down from England in February. |
Fabio Capello has made it known to Chelsea's
hierarchy that he is eager to take up the reins at Stamford Bridge this
summer as the former England coach seeks a return to top-flight club
management.
The Italian is due to attend Saturday's Champions League
final in Munich, which marks the last game of Roberto Di Matteo's
impressive tenure as interim first-team coach. Chelsea are still
evaluating who will fill the position vacated by André Villas-Boas in
the first week of March but, with their chances of securing Roman
Abramovich's first choice – Pep Guardiola – appearing remote, Capello
has moved to promote his own candidacy.
The 65-year-old's
availability had been explored by intermediaries apparently working with
Chelsea's blessing earlier this year once it became clear that
Villas-Boas's spell in charge was unraveling. That would have been on a
short-term basis – the former Liverpool manager Rafael Benítez was also
discussed at the time – and, like the Spaniard, Capello would have
considered the role only on a more permanent basis. The Italian, who
does not operate with an agent, has been contacted by brokers claiming
to be working on behalf of the club and has expressed his desire to be
considered. He has not as yet been offered the job.
Capello
resigned as England coach in February and has spent the last three
months between Italy, Spain, Dubai, London and at his family home in
Lugano. He has received offers from Spain and Russia and, having opted
against retirement, is seeking a return to an ambitious leading European
club. He has accepted opportunities will be limited in Italy and Spain
and, with his compatriot Marcello Lippi having been appointed by
Guangzhou Evergrande – an £8m-a-year role for which Capello had also
been considered – considers the Premier League his most likely route
back.
His reputation may have been damaged in this country by
England's toils at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa but his record as a
club manager remains impressive. He has won nine titles in 16 seasons
with Milan, Real Madrid, Roma and Juventus – his two Juve titles having
since been revoked – although his sole success in the Champions League
remains the Rossoneri's victory over Barcelona in 1994. His appointment
would find favour with the likes of John Terry, whose removal from the
England captaincy had prompted the Italian's resignation earlier this
year.
Capello still owns an apartment in Chelsea and recently
expressed a desire to work in the Premier League. "England would be very
interesting for me because I know very well the teams and the players
and everything would be less difficult," he said in an interview with
The Times this month. "I've refused some really good offers for a lot of
money, from clubs in China and different places in the world. I want
one more challenge.
"At the end of my career it would be
interesting to find a team with big motivation to arrive at the top. I
want to manage a team that is able to play in the Champions League and
fight for lots of trophies. If I don't find the kind of club I want I'll
return to being a pundit."
Chelsea had quickly identified
Guardiola as their primary target following Villas-Boas's sacking but
the 41-year-old has reiterated he will now be taking a year-long
sabbatical from the game after leaving Barcelona. José Mourinho, another
who was under consideration, is to remain at Real Madrid, leaving the
likes of the France coach, Laurent Blanc, and Capello as viable
alternatives.
Di Matteo, who has claimed the FA Cup and could win
the club's first European Cup against Bayern Munich, has intimated in
recent weeks that he does not expect to be offered the role on a
permanent basis despite his successes during his 10-week spell in
temporary charge.
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