7:02 am | January 25, 2019 | Go to Source | Author:
11:41 AM ET
Thierry Henry surely didn’t realise at the time what a negative impact one decision would have on his tenure as Monaco manager. But on December 11, on the eve of his team’s Champions League match against Borussia Dortmund, he went too far.
That day, Henry humiliated his 20-year-old goalkeeper, Loic Badiashile, for not properly pushing his chair back under the desk at the end of their pre-match joint press conference. Henry was probably just trying to show his authority, while being a bit pedantic as well. Some people applauded his action, highlighting that it was his way to get respect. But at Monaco, it didn’t go down well at all. It’s not the way a manager, let alone a huge name like Henry, should treat a player in public or in private. Badiashile did nothing wrong. He had tucked his chair under the desk. Clearly not enough for his manager but still, why shame him publicly like that?
Most of the squad didn’t want Leonardo Jardim to leave. Despite their bad results of the start of the season — they won once in Ligue 1 on Aug. 11 and didn’t win again before Jardim was sacked on October 11 — they still believed they could turn things around with him. They were still behind him.
In contrast, they never fully were behind Henry. The disconnect was mostly down to his attitude, as seen in the incident with Badiashile. Henry still behaves like a player and, according to someone close to the squad, it felt too much like he was still “one of the boys.” The Frenchman, 41, who had never managed a first team before, never carried himself like a manager. His body language, some of his reactions and his methods gave away the fact that he wasn’t ready for a significant rescue job like this one.