Bangladesh Federation End Pursuit Of Manager Chris Coleman

The Bangladesh Football Federation (BFF) has officially terminated all contractual negotiations with the former Wales national team manager, Chris Coleman, regarding the vacant head coach position of the Bangladesh men’s national senior football team. On Monday, 18 May 2026, the President of the BFF, Tabith Awal, confirmed during an official media briefing that a final agreement with the high-profile Welsh tactician would not materialise. Despite the sudden breakdown of these complex negotiations, the sport’s national governing body is moving swiftly to secure alternative technical leadership, with advanced plans to formalise an employment contract with a new head coach either on Monday evening or Tuesday.

Initially, Chris Coleman emerged as the absolute priority and preferred first-choice candidate for the federation’s executive hierarchy. The primary hurdle throughout the preliminary discussions had revolved around the substantial salary and remuneration demands associated with the former English Premier League manager. However, the domestic football federation had proactively managed to resolve these internal compensation complexities, ensuring that sufficient economic provisions were made available to support the high-profile appointment.

The ultimate collapse of the high-stakes deal was directly precipitated by an unexpected financial demand raised by Coleman’s representing intermediary agents at the eleventh hour. The agency representatives insisted that the Bangladesh Football Federation must directly underwrite their third-party agency fees as an isolated transaction, over and above the comprehensive remuneration package already designated for the head coach himself. The BFF executive committee flatly refused to comply with this conditional demand, leading to a definitive end to Coleman’s candidacy for the national team dugout.

Institutional Governance and Policy Precedents

Speaking to members of the sports press corps at the BFF headquarters in Dhaka, Tabith Awal provided a detailed breakdown of the precise moment the final transactional negotiations deteriorated. The federation president clarified that the breakdown did not stem from an absolute lack of financial resources or budgetary constraints, but rather from a fundamental adherence to the established regulatory principles of the institution.

“When we reached the final stages of completing the overall transaction, we encountered a specific point of complete disagreement,” Tabith Awal stated. “The intermediary agent involved suddenly demanded that the BFF absorb their personal agent fees. This is not primarily an issue concerning the absolute quantity of money, but rather a matter of institutional principle. Historically, the federation has never paid third-party agent fees in any of our previous international managerial appointments. Despite our overall operational budget being fully prepared and available, the agent informed us that they were unwilling to finalise the contractual agreement under these operational parameters.”

The federation’s refusal to yield to these external demands aligns with transparent financial governance protocols. Standard administrative guidelines dictate that the specific entity that formally engages an agent or legal representative is solely responsible for fulfilling their personal financial compensation. The BFF leadership emphasised that bypassing these internal protocols would compromise their financial regulatory compliance, a strict standard they have consistently maintained across all footballing operations.

Urgent Shortlist and Preparations for San Marino

With Chris Coleman officially out of the running, the governing body has turned its full attention to the remaining international managers currently under consideration on its official shortlist. Prominent candidates remaining on the federation’s radar include the experienced German tactician Bernd Storck and Thomas Dooley.

The federation is operating under immense time constraints due to a crucial upcoming international fixture on the FIFA calendar. The Bangladesh national team is scheduled to travel to Europe to play an international friendly match against San Marino on 5 June 2026. Consequently, appointing a permanent management team in the shortest possible timeframe remains an absolute necessity for the country to ensure proper squad selection and tactical briefing.

To ensure the squad is optimally prepared for the European trip, the federation has already established an explicit timeline for the upcoming training camp. Awal confirmed that the national team will formally commence its residential training camp on 24 May 2026. This intensive preparation camp will be fully supervised and led by the newly appointed, permanent head coach, whose official unveiling is expected within the next twenty-four hours.

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