Sabri Lamouchi

Tunisian-French football manager (born 1971) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sabri Lamouchi (born 9 November 1971) is a football manager and former player who played for the French national team, and currently serves as head coach of the Tunisia national football team.

Full name Sabri Lamouchi[1]
Date of birth (1971-11-09) 9 November 1971 (age 54)[2]
Place of birth Lyon, France
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)[2]
Quick facts Personal information, Full name ...
Sabri Lamouchi
Lamouchi in 2022
Personal information
Full name Sabri Lamouchi[1]
Date of birth (1971-11-09) 9 November 1971 (age 54)[2]
Place of birth Lyon, France
Height 1.75 m (5 ft 9 in)[2]
Position Midfielder[2]
Team information
Current team
Tunisia (manager)
Youth career
1977–1982 AS Lyon-Duchère
1982–1989 Cascol Oullins
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1990–1994 Alès 106 (26)
1994–1998 Auxerre 129 (19)
1998–2000 Monaco 56 (4)
2000–2003 Parma 90 (7)
2003–2005 Inter Milan 16 (0)
2004–2005Genoa (loan) 20 (1)
2005–2006 Marseille 36 (5)
2006–2007 Al-Rayyan 7 (6)
2007–2008 Umm-Salal 10 (1)
2009 Al-Kharitiyath
Total 470 (79)
International career
1996–2001 France 12 (1)
Managerial career
2012–2014 Ivory Coast
2014–2017 El Jaish
2017–2018 Rennes
2019–2020 Nottingham Forest
2020–2021 Al-Duhail
2023 Cardiff City
2024–2025 Al-Riyadh
2025 Al-Diriyah
2026– Tunisia
* Club domestic league appearances and goals
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During his playing career, Lamouchi played for clubs in France, Italy and Qatar.

Early life

Lamouchi was born in Lyon, France,[2] to Tunisian parents, and was raised in France. He holds French and Tunisian citizenship.[3]

Club career

Lamouchi started his professional career with Alès and then moved to Auxerre for four years. He then went on to join Monaco, who he helped to the Ligue 1 title in 2000, before being snapped up by Parma of Italy. He later moved to Inter Milan.[citation needed]

Lamouchi had a spell at Genoa before joining Marseille on loan the following year. In January 2006, the loan deal was made a permanent move. He played for Marseille for six further months, until he announced that he was leaving the club on 18 September 2006, although his contract ran until June 2007.[citation needed]

In 2006, Lamouchi moved to Al-Rayyan in the Qatar Stars League, where he scored a spectacular goal in his first match. The next season, he joined Umm-Salal.[citation needed]

In January 2009, Lamouchi transferred to Al-Kharitiyath.[citation needed]

International career

Sabri Lamouchi holds Tunisian and French nationalities by birth since he was born in France before 1994 to parents born in French protectorate of Tunisia before its independence. Lamouchi was capped 12 times and scored one goal for the France national team. He made his debut in 1996 and was a member of the French European Championship squad the same year. He was in France's 28 men-preliminary squad for the 1998 FIFA World Cup on home soil. However he was one of the six players axed by head coach Aimé Jacquet just before the tournament began. The team went on to win the tournament.[4]

Managerial career

Ivory Coast

In May 2012, he became manager of the Ivory Coast national team, his first managerial position. The Elephants qualified for the 2014 FIFA World Cup, ranked 23rd at the time – highest ranked in Africa – and started their group play with a 2–1 victory over Japan. That was followed by a 2–1 loss to group favourite Colombia. On his last game as Ivory Coast's manager, he and his team lost 2–1 against Greece and they were eliminated from the FIFA World Cup. The team featured stars such as Yaya Touré, Gervinho, Wilfried Bony and Didier Drogba. Lamouchi resigned from the position following Les Elephants' exit from the competition.[5]

Rennes

On 8 November 2017, Lamouchi became the manager of French side Rennes. He led the team to a 5th place synonymous with Europa League qualification. On 3 December 2018 after a string of poor results, he was sacked from the club.[6]

Nottingham Forest

2019–20 season

On 28 June 2019, following the departure of Martin O'Neill, it was announced that Lamouchi would become head coach of Nottingham Forest for the 2019–20 season.[7] He enjoyed a strong start to the season and won the league's Manager of the Month award for September 2019.[8] On 19 June 2020, Nottingham Forest announced that Lamouchi had signed an extension to his managerial contract.[9] Forest were in the play-off positions for nearly the whole season, but missed out by finishing seventh on the final day of the season after being beaten at home 1–4 by Stoke City.[10] Lamouchi had guided Forest to their highest league position since the 2010–11 season, and also became the first Forest manager to complete a full season in over nine years.[11]

2020–21 season

Following Forest's disappointing end to the season, Lamouchi flew to Athens to meet with the Forest board, including Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis, where it was decided that Lamouchi would remain as Forest's Head Coach. To improve on the shortcomings of the previous season, four new additions were made to Lamouchi's coaching staff, along with a change in transfer strategy that would place a greater focus on domestic signings.[12]

On 5 September 2020, Nottingham Forest were knocked out of the League Cup in a 1–0 defeat to Barnsley. In a video call to the squad following that game, Marinakis described the result as a 'humiliation' to the football club that Forest would lose twice to a club that had barely survived relegation the previous season. It was clear that Marinakis' patience with Lamouchi was running out, and Marinakis angrily told Albert Adomah and João Carvalho that they could leave the club without consulting Lamouchi.[13]

On 6 October 2020, Lamouchi's contract was terminated and he was immediately replaced by Chris Hughton.[14] Forest had lost all five competitive games of the new season, and had failed to win in their last eleven games.[15]

Al-Duhail

In October 2020, Lamouchi was appointed manager of Qatari side Al-Duhail.[16] On 9 August 2021, his contract was terminated by mutual consent.[17]

Cardiff City

On 27 January 2023, Lamouchi returned to British football when he was appointed as manager of Welsh club Cardiff City.[18] Despite successfully helping the team steer clear of relegation at the end of the 2022-23 season, on 16 May 2023, Cardiff City announced that Lamouchi would leave the club at the end of his contract.[19]

Saudi Arabia

On 12 July 2024, Lamouchi was appointed manager of Saudi Pro League club Al-Riyadh.[20] He was sacked on 19 April 2025.

On 20 July 2025, Lamouchi was appointed as manager of Saudi First Division League club Al-Diriyah.[21] He was sacked on 6 December 2025.[22]

Tunisia

On 14 January 2026, the Tunisian Football Federation announced an agreement with Lamouchi to coach the Tunisia national team on a contract extending until 31 July 2028.[23]

Managerial statistics

As of match played 31 March 2026[24]
More information Team, From ...
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team From To Record
G W D L Win %
Ivory Coast 28 May 2012 25 June 2014 281477050.00
El Jaish 27 December 2014 1 July 2017 92501626054.35
Rennes 8 November 2017 3 December 2018 50191318038.00
Nottingham Forest 28 June 2019 6 October 2020 55201619036.36
Al-Duhail 14 October 2020 9 August 2021 3721511056.76
Cardiff City 27 January 2023 16 May 2023 186210033.33
Al-Riyadh 12 July 2024 19 April 2025 3010713033.33
Al-Diriyah 20 July 2025 6 December 2025 10631060.00
Tunisia 14 January 2026 present 2110050.00
Total 32214770105045.65
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Honours

References

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