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Alain Perrin
Footballer

Alain Perrin

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Biography

Alain Perrin (born 7 October 1956 in Lure, Haute-Saône), is a retired French footballer and has most recently coached the China national football team.

Managerial career

Perrin began his coaching career at AS Nancy in 1983, as junior coach to Arsène Wenger. He built up a reputation as a talented young coach whilst at the club, and was appointed to run the club's academy.

In 1993, Perrin had his first chance at management, taking over as manager of French National 2 (fourth division) club Troyes AC, quickly taking the club to Ligue 1 after three promotions in six seasons, and qualifying for the UEFA Cup. This success led to his being offered the position as manager of Olympique de Marseille in 2002.

During his time at the club, Perrin paid a French domestic transfer record for Didier Drogba. However, Perrin was sacked by Marseille, after a poor run of league form in January 2004.

Perrin was linked to a number of positions around Europe, including the position of manager at Southampton. However, in July 2004 he was named manager of Al-Ain in the United Arab Emirates. Perrin had little luck with his new club however and was sacked after a disappointing run in October 2004.

In April 2005, he was appointed manager of Portsmouth, replacing caretaker Velimir Zajec, who had been in charge, since previous manager Harry Redknapp left in November 2004. Immediately, he was nicknamed 'Reggie' by the British press, and the Pompey fans, after the character Reginald Perrin from "The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin". He succeeded in keeping the club in the top flight, and will be fondly remembered for the 4-1 win of local rivals Southampton, a result that contributed to their eventual relegation. However, just 8 months into the job, and after achieving only four wins from 20 games, Perrin was sacked.

He remained out of football management for 6 months, before returning on 19 May 2006 to the familiar territory of the French league at Ligue 1 side Sochaux. In 2007, he won the French Cup with his new club over Marseille.

Perrin took over as manager of Olympique Lyonnais on 30 May 2007, after Gérard Houllier resigned earlier that month. In his first season, he led the club to a seventh consecutive Ligue 1 championship title. He also managed to retain the French Cup which he had won with Sochaux the previous year. He left the club in June 2008. He was rumoured to take over the position of French national manager, but it was confirmed on 3 July 2008 that Raymond Domenech would remain in the position. On 11 November 2008, he became the new manager of Saint-Étienne, and was fired on 15 December 2009.

On 1 June 2012 Perrin decided to leave Al-Khor Sports Club to take up the vacant Qatar U23 position. His first assignment was to lead the team at the AFC Under-22 qualifiers, however the team were unable to make the tournament after they were knocked out in the group stages of the qualification process. Despite this disappointment Perrin continued to lead them into the 2012 Under 23 Gulf Cup of Nations where the team fared considerably better reaching the semi-finals of the tournament and eventually coming fourth overall in the competition.

On 20 December 2012, Perrin joined Al Gharafa and left just about two months after. In March 2013, he was appointed new head coach of Umm Salal to replace Bertrand Marchand. However, he resigned from his post on 30 September 2013.

On 28 February 2014, he was named as new China national football team manager, replacing Antonio Camacho. On 5 March 2014, China qualified for the 2015 AFC Asian Cup in Australia. In the tournament, Perrin secured a 1–0 victory for China over Saudi Arabia and two another 2–1 victories over Uzbekistan and North Korea. China finished first in the group and qualified to knockout stage after 11 years, where they faced host country Australia in quarter-finals where they lost 0–2.

Statistics

Manager

As of 17 November 2015
TeamNatFromToRecord
GWDLWin %
TroyesFrance1 July 199330 June 20023241331058641.05
MarseilleFrance1 July 200214 January 2004603192051.67
Al-AinUnited Arab Emirates13 July 200424 October 2004420250
PortsmouthEngland7 April 200524 November 200521461119.05
SochauxFrance1 August 200630 June 20074722131246.81
LyonFrance1 July 200716 June 2008593911966.10
Saint-ÉtienneFrance12 November 200815 December 20095116122331.37
Al-KhorQatar14 June 201031 May 20126720153229.85
Qatar U23Qatar1 June 201219 December 2012933333.33
Al GharafaQatar20 December 201221 February 2013733142.86
Umm SalalQatar13 March 201330 September 20131142536.36
ChinaChina28 February 20148 January 201628159453.57
Total67728618420742.25

China PR Result

#DateVenueOpponentResultGoalscorersCompetition
2014
1June 18, 2014China Shenyang, China Macedonia2–0Yu Hanchao & Gao DiFriendly
2June 22, 2014China Jinan, China Macedonia0–0Friendly
3June 29, 2014China Shenzhen, China Mali1–3Gao LinFriendly
4September 4, 2014China Anshan, China Kuwait3–1Yang Xu, Yu Hanchao & Wu LeiFriendly
5September 9, 2014China Harbin, China Jordan1–1Gao Lin (P)Friendly
6October 10, 2014China Wuhan, China Thailand3–0Sinthaweechai Hathairattanakool (OG), Sun Ke & Yang XuFriendly
7October 14, 2014China Changsha, China Paraguay2–1Zheng Zhi (P) & Wu LeiFriendly
8November 14, 2014China Nanchang, China New Zealand1–1Zheng ZhiFriendly
9November 18, 2014China Xian, China Honduras0–0Friendly
10December 13, 2014China Chenzhou, China Kyrgyzstan4–0Yang Xu(2), Zheng Zhi & Wu LeiFriendly
11December 17, 2014China Qingyuan, China Kyrgyzstan2–0Yang Xu & Gao LinFriendly
12December 21, 2014China Chenzhou, China Palestine0–0Friendly
2015
13January 3, 2015Australia Sydney, Australia Oman4–1Yang Xu, Yu Hai, Wu Lei & Hao JunminFriendly
14January 10, 2015Australia Brisbane, Australia Saudi Arabia1–0Yu Hai2015 AFC Asian Cup
15January 14, 2015Australia Brisbane, Australia Uzbekistan2–1Wu Xi & Sun Ke2015 AFC Asian Cup
16January 18, 2015Australia Canberra, Australia North Korea2–1Sun Ke (2)2015 AFC Asian Cup
17January 22, 2015Australia Brisbane, Australia Australia0–22015 AFC Asian Cup
18March 27, 2015China Changsha, China Haiti2–2Yang Xu & Yu DabaoFriendly
19March 31, 2015China Nanjing, China Tunisia1–1Yu DabaoFriendly
20June 16, 2015Bhutan Thimphu, Bhutan Bhutan6–0Yang Xu(3), Yu Dabao(2) & Wu Lei2018 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)
21August 2, 2015China Wuhan, China South Korea0–22015 EAFF East Asian Cup
22August 5, 2015China Wuhan, China North Korea2–0Yu Dabao & Wang Yongpo2015 EAFF East Asian Cup
23August 9, 2015China Wuhan, China Japan1–1Wu Lei2015 EAFF East Asian Cup
24September 3, 2015China Shenzhen, China Hong Kong0–02018 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)
25September 8, 2015China Shengyang, China Maldives3–0Yu Dabao(2), Zhang Linpeng2018 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)
26October 8, 2015Qatar Doha, Qatar Qatar0–12018 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)
27November 12, 2015China Changsha, China Bhutan12–0Yang Xu(4), Yu Dabao(2), Wang Yongpo(2), Yu Hanchao(2), Mei Fang, Zhang Xizhe2018 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)
28November 17, 2015Hong Kong Hong Kong Hong Kong0–02018 FIFA World Cup qualification (AFC)

Honours

Troyes

  • UEFA Intertoto Cup
    • Winners (1) : 2001

Sochaux

  • Coupe de France
    • Winner (1): 2007

Lyon

  • Ligue 1
    • Winner (1): 2007–08
  • Coupe de France
    • Winner (1): 2008

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