
Tunisia's Coach Sacking Creates Unpredictable Edge for World Cup Milestone Against Japan
The 1,000th World Cup match sees a wounded Tunisia, under new coach Hervé Renard, clinging to hope against a Japan side buoyed by a draw with the Netherlands.
The sudden dismissal of Sabri Lamouchi — the first coach ever sacked after a single World Cup match — defines the anxious prelude to Saturday’s meeting between Tunisia and Japan in Monterrey. Lamouchi paid the price for a 5-1 thrashing by Sweden, and in his place the Tunisian federation has rushed in Hervé Renard, a Frenchman with a reputation for conjuring improbable results at major tournaments. The match carries historic weight as the 1,000th in World Cup finals history, but for Tunisia the milestone is overshadowed by a desperate need to avoid early elimination from Group F.
Viewed from Tunis, Renard’s appointment is a gamble on his proven ability to galvanise sides in disarray — most famously when his Saudi Arabia team stunned eventual champions Argentina in 2022. Renard, however, dismissed talk of a magic touch. “I am no wizard,” he said at Friday’s press conference, emphasising instead a return to basics: rigour, discipline and a collective spirit. Tunisian captain Ellyes Skhiri echoed that unity offered the only path to an upset, while the coach admitted that even his players would not know the starting lineup until shortly before kick-off. The squad, he said, carries a “thirst for revenge”, a sentiment amplified after Cape Verde’s shock draw with Spain demonstrated that surprises remain possible.
Japanese analysts, meanwhile, are cautious despite their team’s far more stable build-up. Hajime Moriyasu’s side fought back twice to earn a 2-2 draw with the Netherlands, showcasing the resilience that has become a hallmark of a squad in which 23 of 26 players are based in European leagues. Yet Moriyasu warned publicly that a wounded Tunisia would be “an even more intense” opponent under Renard, whose passion he expects to transmit through team talks. Japan will be without key attacker Takefusa Kubo, injured against the Dutch, and must manage the heat of Monterrey, where temperatures are forecast near 30°C — conditions that Japan’s camp believes their pre-tournament acclimatisation has addressed.
With Sweden topping the group on three points, both sides arrive in distinct states of urgency. Japan’s draw leaves them level with the Dutch on one point, while Tunisia sit last. The match therefore pivots on whether Renard’s hurried overhaul can outwit Japan’s organised, counter-attacking structure. A defeat would all but end Tunisia’s campaign; a win for Japan would open a clear path to the knockout rounds. The milestone occasion, rising temperatures, and coaching intrigue combine to promise a contest shaped less by pedigree than by the psychological currents swirling through both camps.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
Southeast Asian media highlight Japan's strength and favoritism after a draw with the Netherlands, while Tunisia is portrayed as a crisis-hit team. Renard's appointment is viewed with caution, and the analysis is technical and measured, predicting a Japanese win.
Arab Gulf media present Tunisia as underdogs eager to upset, emphasizing the need for a perfect collective performance. The landmark 1000th World Cup match is highlighted, and Renard's call for unity is noted. The tone is realistic, with skepticism about Tunisia's chances.
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