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Roberto De Zerbi Offers Resign After Marseille’s Shock Defeat To Auxerre
Marseille coach, Roberto de Zerbi, vented his frustration after his team struggled at home again on Friday losing 3-1 to Auxerre.
The Italian coach said after the match he had told Marseille president Pablo Longoria, “If I’m the problem, I’m ready to leave. I’ll leave the money and hand back my contract.
“I come from the street, I’m direct, I don’t talk for the sake of talking.”
Marseille have achieved just one victory in their five home Ligue 1 matches this season, but they remain unbeaten on the road, winning five out of six away games.
“I came to Marseille for the Velodrome, to play at the Velodrome,” said the 45-year-old former Brighton manager.
“And I can’t get the players to give here what I see in training and in away games. It’s my fault, it’s my responsibility.”
“Playing at the Velodrome is a privilege. I want to be able to pass on to the people who work with me what I think about football. And I can’t do that.”
Marseille found themselves three goals down by half-time, with Lassine Sinayoko, Gaetan Perrin, and Hamed Traore all scoring for Auxerre. Mason Greenwood pulled one back from the penalty spot after the hour mark, marking his seventh goal of the league season.
Sinayoko gave the visitors the lead 10 minutes after an error by defender Lilian Brassier.
Then two goals in two minutes immediately before the interval put Auxerre in a commanding position at the Velodrome.
First, Perrin doubled the lead on 43 minutes as Sinayoko turned provider, then Marseille gave the ball away again, and Traore found the back of the net through goalkeeper Geronimo Rulli’s legs.
Greenwood struck back in the 65th minute from the spot, after a handball against Clement Akpa.
“Leading 3-0 at the break was something we’d never have imagined,” said Auxerre coach Christophe Pelissier.
“We wanted to defend well on the inside and quickly burst down the flanks. We did that perfectly and effectively in the first half.
The result sends Auxerre into the European spots as they jumped up to sixth place on 16 points.
Marseille currently sits in second place, six points behind their fierce rivals PSG.
However, they could drop out of the top three by the end of the weekend, as third-place Monaco and fourth-place Lille are both scheduled to play on Saturday and Sunday, respectively.
On Saturday, PSG travel to Angers, while Monaco can leapfrog Marseille into the second spot when they visit Strasbourg. Fourth-placed Lille visit fifth-placed Nice on Sunday.