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Australia coach quits just a week after guiding them to next summer's World Cup

After weeks of speculation, the Australian manager has resigned.

AN EMOTIONAL ANGE Postecoglou said he will not take Australia to the World Cup next year after a lengthy qualification campaign, leaving the team just months to find a new coach for Russia.

Australia Honduras WCup Soccer Australia players celebrate last week's win over Honduras. Daniel Munoz Daniel Munoz

The announcement came at the tail-end of the Australian’s five-year coaching contract with the Socceroos, and ended weeks of speculation after reports emerged he would quit even if they qualified for the World Cup in 2018.

The 52-year-old did not reveal why he chose to step down or announce any future plans, simply saying it was “the right time” to quit for himself and the team.

Postecoglou also brushed aside questions about whether he had been affected by media criticism, and denied any conflict with the governing body.

“After a great deal of thought and soul-searching, I’ve decided that the journey for me ends as Socceroo coach,” Postecoglou told a press conference in Sydney.

“It’s been the biggest privilege of my life and probably not the ending I had envisaged when we started, but at the same time, knowing it’s the right time for me and the right decision.”

Australia v Germany - 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup - Group B - Fisht Olympic Stadium There had been speculation over the future of Ange Postecoglou. EMPICS Sport EMPICS Sport

FFA chief executive David Gallop said he was “disappointed and I guess still a bit puzzled,” by Postecoglou’s decision, but added, “I’m supportive of the notion that sometimes you reach a point where you just know that you need to do something new”.

“As for the process going forward, we won’t be rushed,” he added, sitting alongside Postecoglou.

“The Socceroos have a big gap in the calendar now, and it’s important that we get the right person to fill the big shoes,” he said.

The Socceroos do not play until March, with Gallop adding that “there’s enormous advantages in having an Australian in this position”.

“But it doesn’t necessarily guarantee that we will be able to find an Australian.”

(SP)AUSTRALIA-SYDNEY-FIFA 2018 WORLD CUP-QUALIFIERS Australia won 3-1 on aggregate in the play-off against Honduras. Xinhua News Agency / PA Images Xinhua News Agency / PA Images / PA Images

Gallop said it was too early to say if the FFA would appoint an interim coach to guide the team through the World Cup, or opt for a longer-term appointment.

Sydney FC coach and Australian Graham Arnold has been seen as one of the top contenders to replace Postecoglou.

Arnold, a former Socceroos striker, guided Sydney to their third A-League championship title in May in a record-breaking season.

He worked under the Socceroos’ Dutch coaches Guus Hiddink and Pim Verbeek, and managed the team in 2007 during the Asian Cup.

Australia reached their fourth-straight World Cup in Sydney last week after defeating Honduras in a 3-1 aggregate play-off victory in the qualifiers.

The win capped off a gruelling, 22-match, 29-month qualifying campaign for Postecoglou and the team that criss-crossed Asia, the Middle East and Central America.

Under Postecoglou, the Socceroos won 22 matches out of 49, drawing 12 and losing 15.

Greek-born Postecoglou, who migrated to Australia as a five-year-old, was flung into the coaching hot seat just months before the last World Cup.

He was given a five-year contract by the FFA after the sacking of German Holger Osieck and became the Socceroos’ first full-time Australian coach in nine years.

He had won two A-League championships with Brisbane Roar and gained a reputation for fast-paced, aggressive, passing football.

Postecoglou refused to reveal details of where he might coach next, only saying that “I don’t want to be unemployed for too long”.

“I want to coach abroad. Part of me… is pretty keen to get stuck back into club football, working day to day,” he said.

“I have loved this job. But it’s been all-encompassing… I’ll probably need to have a break with the family and just sort of regather my thoughts.”

© AFP 2017

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