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Lyon will hire Paulo Fonseca as its new coach, a person with direct knowledge of the deal has told The Associated Press. The person requested anonymity because the deal has yet to be announced officially.
Fonseca will replace Pierre Sage, who was fired despite leading the French league club out of a crisis last season and having the team within reach of a Champions League place in this campaign. Sage's dismissal on Tuesday followed a draw with Nantes in Ligue 1 over the weekend and left many observers perplexed. And after 19 matches this season, Lyon is sixth in the league β just four points off a Champions League spot β and in a good position to qualify for the knockout stage of the Europa League.
Lyon is owned by American businessman John Textor, who visited the club in person this week. He had been in regular contact with Fonseca in recent years and previously tried to hire him. The year-old Fonseca produced only 12 wins in 24 matches across all competitions with AC Milan but the Portuguese coach was more succesful with Lille, where he built one of the best attacking and efficient sides in France despite operating on a limited budget.
The club's ambition is to qualify for the Champions League on a regular basis and to challenge Paris Saint-Germain's supremacy. Lyon also had to deal with off-the-pitch issues this season and is risking relegation to the second tier because of financial issues. Ahmad al-Sharaa, who was once aligned with al-Qaida, landed in Riyadh alongside his government's foreign minister, Asaad al-Shaibani. The two men traveled on a Saudi jet, with a Saudi flag visible on the table behind them. Saudi state television trumpeted the fact that al-Sharaa, first known internationally by the nom de guerre Abu Mohammed al-Golani, made Riyadh his first destination.
Syria's new three-star, tricolor flag flew next to Saudi Arabia's own at the airport as al-Sharaa in a suit and tie walked off the plane. Neither nation offered an immediate readout of their conversation. Saudi Arabia had been among the Arab nations that poured money into insurgent groups that tried to topple President Bashar Assad after Syria's Arab Spring protests turned into a bloody crackdown.