Club Brugge has parted ways with Scott Parker after less than three months as the head coach of the Belgian champions.
The decision came in the aftermath of a crushing 5-1 defeat to Benfica in the Champions League. Parker, who had been out of work since being fired by Bournemouth in August 2022, had been hired by Brugge on December 31, 2022, following the departure of Carl Hoefkens.
During his tenure at Brugge, Parker managed only two wins in 12 matches, both of which were in the Belgian league. The team lost both matches against Benfica in the Champions League’s last 16, exiting the competition with a 7-1 aggregate score.
Brugge’s form had been in decline since November 2022, and it continued to slide during Parker’s time as head coach.
Despite a strong start in the Champions League group stage, where they finished second to Porto and ahead of Bayer Leverkusen and Atletico Madrid, Brugge’s domestic performance was lackluster.
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Parker inherited a team that had won the Belgian league title for the third season in a row in May 2022 and the 18th time overall. However, the team was fourth in the standings, 21 points behind leader Genk, before Parker’s departure.
In a brief statement, the club did not announce a replacement for Parker. The club’s management was reportedly disappointed with Parker’s inability to halt the team’s domestic slide and lack of progress in the Champions League.
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Parker, for his part, acknowledged that his job was on the line following the defeat against Benfica, stating that “it’s been challenging, but the players have been brilliant and wanting to do everything they can to turn this around. I understand people now doubt me, I’m not naive enough to not think that.
All I can say is that I’m trying to turn this around and create a team that will start winning again.”
Parker’s dismissal adds to the growing list of managerial changes in European football this season. The highly demanding nature of the job, coupled with intense pressure from fans, management, and the media, means that coaches are rarely given time to build and develop their teams.
For Parker, his tenure at Club Brugge has been short-lived, but the 42-year-old Englishman will undoubtedly be looking for another opportunity to prove himself in the future.
