The former England coach has announced he has inoperable pancreatic cancer and has only a matter of months left to live.
Swedish football coach Sven-Goran Eriksson says he has cancer and might have less than a year to live.
The former England coach told Swedish Radio P1 he discovered he had cancer after collapsing suddenly. He said in February last year that he was reducing his public appearances because of health issues.
“Everyone understands that I have a disease that is not good, and everyone guesses that it is cancer and it is,” Eriksson said in an interview published on Thursday.
Eriksson said he has pancreatic cancer and that it is inoperable.
“At best I have maybe a year, at worst maybe a little less,” he said.
The 75-year-old said he is trying to think positively.
“I could go and think about it all the time and sit at home and be grumpy and think I’m unlucky and so on,” he said. “I think that is easily done, that you end up there.”
“No, look at things positively and don’t wallow in adversity. Because this is, of course, the biggest setback,” he added.
Eriksson was England’s first ever foreign-born coach from 2001-06 after making his name winning league titles at club level with Lazio in Italy, Benfica in Portugal and IFK Gothenburg in his native Sweden.
Eriksson led what was regarded as a “golden generation” of players, including David Beckham, Steven Gerrard and Wayne Rooney, at the World Cups in 2002 and 2006 and got the team to the quarterfinals at both tournaments before elimination by Brazil and Portugal, respectively.
In the only other major tournament under Eriksson - the European Championship in 2004 - England was also ousted at the quarterfinal stage, again by Portugal and via a penalty shootout like at the World Cup in 2006.
The England national team and Manchester City, one of the many clubs he coached, were among those to send their best wishes to Eriksson on social media.
Eriksson’s last coaching role was with the Philippines’ national team in 2018-19 and most recently had the role of sporting director at Karlstad, a team in Sweden’s third division.
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