Libreville, Might 28, 2024 (AGP) – The Fécafoot Emergency Committee ought to meet as quickly as potential to make choices concerning the way forward for the Belgian technician, Marc Brys, on the head of the Cameroon nationwide group, on the his surreal alternate with Samuel Eto’o, this Tuesday, in line with a press launch from Fécafoot acquired by the AGP.
We moved up a notch this Tuesday within the open battle between the Ministry of Sports activities and the Cameroonian Soccer Federation (Fécafoot) for a number of weeks. If this “warfare for energy” was achieved earlier than by means of communication and middleman media, this time it has taken step one, in line with movies, which have gone viral on the internet.
These photographs, which have been broadly reported and distributed on the internet, embrace the technical adviser of the Ministry of Sports activities and Bodily Schooling, Tollo, the president of Fécafoot, Samuel Eto’o, and the coach nationwide, Marc Brys, confirming, the truth is, the stress that exists between the totally different events because the arrival of the Belgian technician on the bench of the Indomitable Lions of Cameroon.
And the alternate, surreal and tense to say the least, between the president of Fécafoot, Samuel Eto’o, and the nationwide coach, Marc Brys, at first of the work session, with a view to getting ready of their matches towards Cape City Inexperienced and Angola scheduled for June 8 and 11, 2024 as a part of the 2026 World Cup qualifiers, they ended up lighting the powder. To the purpose the place “Fécafoot’s president later reminded the coach that Fécafoot was his consumer employer and that he would guarantee the implications related along with his failures. Earlier than leaving the room, Mr Brys launched into insults and insults in the direction of Samuel Eto’o, reminding him that he’s the coach and the selector and subsequently he he who decides”, tells the Fécafoot press launch.
Phrases that, in line with some observers, might finish the journey of a Belgian technician in Cameroon.
FE/FSS