Reinaldo Rueda, Colombia’s new coach? There is negotiation



[ad_1]

What the media learned is that the Chilean National Team “does not see with bad eyes” that its current technical director leaves and they can start 2021 with another coach who will take them to the Qatar World Cup 2022.

Moreover, the article reads that Reinaldo Rueda has already reported that he received an offer from the Colombian National Team to be its new technical director, after the departure of Carlos Queiroz.

“He has already advised the Anfp that he is studying the offer to return to direct his country,” read La Cuarta.

What would Reinaldo Rueda’s exit negotiation with Chile look like?

The publication also assured that the retirement of the Chilean coach would take place “in the best terms.”

They would be so willing to negotiate that the media even indicates that Reinaldo Rueda would not be charged a peso for his departure.

“In the Anfp they will not hinder him if the DT wants to leave. […] The exit would not imply paying the clause “, explained the portal, but also suggested that this would have to do with the change they would like to coach in Chile, as he pointed out that there they even thought of firing Reinaldo Rueda, after the World Cup qualifying matches in November 2020, and in the end it was not made for the compensation of about 2 million dollars that would have had to be paid.

Who will be the coach of the Colombian National Team?

Apart from Reinaldo Rueda, Another of the names that sounded the most to replace Carlos Queiroz was José Néstor Pékerman. However, as the days went by, that name was losing force, to the point that sports journalists like César Augusto Londoño said that it had to be discarded.

The other technicians that have been considered among the options are almost all national, as can be seen below, although some from abroad also managed to sound like Marcelo Gallardo, who would already be ruled out:

  • Jorge Luis Pinto.
  • Juan Caros Osorio .
  • Luis Fernando Suarez.
  • Alberto Gamero.
  • Hérnán Darío ‘Bolillo’ Gómez.



[ad_2]