
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
In 2000, Sven-Goran Eriksson got the job as manager of England’s men’s football team. He was the first non-English person to do the job.
Some in England were sceptical about an overseas coach when Sven moved from his post at Lazio in Italy to succeed Kevin Keegan as England boss.
Sven tells Uma Doraiswamy about the media’s reaction to this sporting first, his quest to understand the Liverpudlian accent of some of his new players and how it felt to go out of tournaments on penalties.
The Swede led England to the quarter-finals of the 2002 and 2006 World Cup and 2004 Euros.
He spoke to Sporting Witness a few days ago, on the day he told the world that having been diagnosed with cancer he has, at best, a year to live.
(Photo: England coach Sven Goran Eriksson at the 2002 World Cup. Credit: Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)
4.7
1818 ratings
In 2000, Sven-Goran Eriksson got the job as manager of England’s men’s football team. He was the first non-English person to do the job.
Some in England were sceptical about an overseas coach when Sven moved from his post at Lazio in Italy to succeed Kevin Keegan as England boss.
Sven tells Uma Doraiswamy about the media’s reaction to this sporting first, his quest to understand the Liverpudlian accent of some of his new players and how it felt to go out of tournaments on penalties.
The Swede led England to the quarter-finals of the 2002 and 2006 World Cup and 2004 Euros.
He spoke to Sporting Witness a few days ago, on the day he told the world that having been diagnosed with cancer he has, at best, a year to live.
(Photo: England coach Sven Goran Eriksson at the 2002 World Cup. Credit: Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images)
5,430 Listeners
364 Listeners
1,801 Listeners
7,629 Listeners
476 Listeners
1,756 Listeners
1,081 Listeners
895 Listeners
586 Listeners
959 Listeners
1,986 Listeners
2,083 Listeners
1,040 Listeners
45 Listeners
593 Listeners
758 Listeners
4,196 Listeners
2,970 Listeners
103 Listeners
13,184 Listeners
2,973 Listeners
2,150 Listeners