Bob Bradley Will be Missed in Egypt

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Bob Bradley fails to achieve his primary task of steering Egypt to a World Cup place for the first time since 1990.

Egypt’s political turmoil might have hampered Bob Bradley in a sense but there was still an apparent advantage: the American coach guided the Pharaohs to the last phase of the World Cup qualifiers after making the most of the absence of the media hype that usually accompanies the team in such journeys.

Incessant protests, recurring clashes and a political upheaval have been dominating the everyday discussions of Egyptians since Bradley took charge of the national team, succeeding highly-successful boss Hassan Shehata in November 2011.

Egypt’s football supporters hardly put pressure on him to succeed where his predecessors failed, bearing in mind that a variety of problems plaguing domestic football make it very difficult to realize a long-held dream of ending a barren World Cup qualifying run.

Egypt will miss hard working coach Bob Bradley

Hard conditions

Bradley has encountered a series of obstacles since taking over from Shehata, ranging from the downward spiral of some prominent players who formed the backbone of Shehata’s successful setup to a complete halt of domestic football activities.

The likes of Essam El-Hadary, Amr Zaki, Mohamed Zidan, Emad Meteb and Hosni Abd-Rabou were sidelined for long spells for different reasons, restricting the options of Bradley and prompting him to look for local yet inexperienced talents to plug that gap.

He was not really given the chance to do so. Intermittent league games over two seasons meant his options were too limited, and the cancellation of two successive Premier Leagues had him scratching his head.

“Bradley cannot be blamed alone. Yes, he did some mistakes, especially with regard to his tactical choices, but the entire football system here should be blamed for the failure to reach the World Cup,” football pundit Khaled Bayoumi told Ahram Online.

“For example, the Egyptian Football Association could not even arrange any high-profile friendly games during the football stoppage. It was very difficult to prepare the team during all those problems.”

Bradley, who was also deprived of the advantage of playing home games at the usual passionate Cairo Stadium due to lingering security concerns, with most of the competitive matches taking place in Alexandria behind closed doors, still came through that unscathed.

He moulded a young team around veterans Mohamed Abou-Treika and Wael Gomaa and, although Egypt did not play eye-catching football, their pragmatic approach paid off with easy wins over Guinea, Mozambique and Zimbabwe in the group stage of the World Cup qualifiers.

Bradley might be mostly remembered for the hammering in Kumasi but, in all, his record remains impressive. Egypt won 23 matches, drew six and lost eight in 37 matches under his guidance.

“We can’t say that he has failed, this is harsh. But at the end he had a solitary target that he did not achieve, this is all what can we say,” Bayoumi added.

Reports suggest Bradley will be replaced by a local coach as the search continues for a man with a magic World Cup formula.

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