France’s all-time leading scorer and an former Arsenal’s greatest striker Thierry Henry landed his first managerial job on Saturday after Monaco hired him as a replacement for Leonardo Jardim, who was dismissed this week.
The 41-year-old Henry started his professional career at the Riviera club and played in the French league with Monaco from 1994-99.
He’s signed on as coach for three seasons, to June 2021. He starts on Monday.
“I thank AS Monaco for giving me the opportunity to coach the team of this club which is so special to me,” Henry said in a statement on the club website. “I am very happy to come back to AS Monaco and extremely determined to meet the challenges ahead. I cannot wait to meet the players to start working together.”
Henry has no experience as a manager but had been working as an assistant to Belgium coach Roberto Martinez since 2016. He was part of the staff that led the team to third place at the World Cup in Russia.
Henry became the latest member of the France squad that won the 1998 World Cup to fully embrace a coaching career, following in the footsteps of Laurent Blanc, Didier Deschamps, Patrick Vieira and Zinedine Zidane among others.
“Thierry is ready to be head coach in a club,” Martinez told L’Equipe newspaper in an interview published this week. “He likes what he does and enjoying it is an essential part of this job.”
Henry turned down an offer from Bordeaux this summer and was also in the running to replace Steve Bruce as Aston Villa manager before Dean Smith was appointed.
In Monaco, which is winless in its past 10 games in all competitions, Henry’s first task will be to get the team back in contention in the league. A traditional powerhouse in French football, Monaco secured top-three finishes over the past five seasons and won the 2017 league under Jardim but is currently in 18th place in the standings, and in last place in its Champions League group.
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