Parreira resigns as SA coach

21/04/2008 15:37

Johannesburg - Brazilian Carlos Alberto Parreira announced his resignation on Monday as coach of 2010 World Cup hosts South Africa.

World Cup-winning coach Parreira, who served 15 months of a three-and-a-half-year contract aimed at transforming the struggling national team, quit because his Brazil-based wife is ill after recent major surgery.

Parreira sent a letter of resignation to South Africa Football Association (SAFA) president Molefi Oliphant before they addressed the media after an emergency meeting of the national governing body.

A weekend Johannesburg newspaper report quoted an unnamed SAFA official saying Leila Parreira was battling cancer and not even iconic former president Nelson Mandela could talk the coach out of leaving.

Leila Parreira told Brazilian newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo last Friday that the coach would return home next month to assist her recovery from major surgery and be with his grandchildren.

The 65-year-old coach guided Brazil to their fourth world title in 1994 and opted to quit a month after being lauded when South Africa gave their finest display for years to outclass Paraguay 3-0 in a Pretoria friendly.

It was the first time in 10 attempts that Bafana Bafana (The Boys) defeated South American opposition since being readmitted to international football in 1992 after three decades of isolation.

South Africa won nine matches, drew six and lost six since Parreira assumed control in February last year with compatriot Jairo Leal and South African Pitso Mosimane his assistants.

Victory over in-form Paraguay came soon after South Africa made a lacklustre first round exit from the African Nations Cup in Ghana following draws with Angola and Senegal and a heavy loss to Tunisia.

Bafana Bafana are guaranteed a place at the first World Cup to be staged in Africa as hosts, but must compete in the 2010 qualifiers because they double as elimination matches for the African Nations Cup in Angola the same year.

The first fixture is away to bogey team Nigeria on May 31 followed by Equatorial Guinea (home) and Sierra Leone (away and home) on the following three weekends.

AP