After a nine month honeymoon, Herve Renard is finally feeling the pressure of marrying into Zambian football family where all matches are great and not small.
Renard, uncertain over his future as Zambia’s coach especially after local mining giant KCM who had sponsored his salary since May but backed-out in November after they began to feel the pinch of the global credit crunch, was on Friday asked a question he hoped would never hear…but not this soon anyway.
Asked by a Lusaka-based TV station if he would quit should public opinion swing against him following Zambia’s recent embarrassing group stage exit at the Cecafa Senior Challenge Cup in Uganda, Renard buckled and said he would respected their wishes.
Nine months is a long time in football, in a span coaches destiny’s are easily made or broken by tournament qualification, promotion and relegation.
In nine months, Renard’s biggest claim to fame has been to guide Zambia to a very gusty final qualifying phase of the 2010 World/Africa Cup group stage qualifiers.
Otherwise there has been nothing much to show that Zambia is on the up before and after that with two regional tournament failures under his helm especially in the Cecafa Senior Challenge Cup a tournament whose national teams rarely ever book air tickets to African Cup tournaments.
In August, he failed to guide Zambia to the finals of the renamed Cosafa Senior Challenge Cup after gaining easy passage, courtesy of their still highly respected regional stature, to the quarterfinals thanks to a preliminary round bye only to mint bronze.
Every tournament, friendly, big or small, is treated with respect and with much anticipation by Zambian fans and defeat is always an anathema.
It might be a little unfair to say Renard is unsettled for the time being but it is quickly going to become a topical issue and it is beginning to feel hotter than October on a rainy January day.
And Renard will not have to wait very long after the Cecafa Cup to find out for himself what the public really feels about him because on January 25, Zambia host DR Congo in a friendly international in the tight confines of Woodlands Stadium in Lusaka.
It will be Zambia’s first official home game this year and fans will be very curious to see for themselves what the future holds for Renard with the CHAN tournament looming over the horizon when they open their account at the inaugural event against hosts Cote d’Ivoire on February 22.