Pitchside US
·15 de novembro de 2025
Wilfried Nancy is in talks with Celtic — and MLS faces the prospect of a significant loss

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Yahoo sportsPitchside US
·15 de novembro de 2025

Celtic FC has opened formal discussions with Wilfried Nancy, with Columbus Crew allegedly granting permission for direct talks this weekend. While a deal is far from finalized, momentum has clearly shifted in favor of the French-born manager emerging as a leading candidate.
Nancy enters this moment of speculation only weeks after Columbus’s frustrating postseason exit. The Crew won their best-of-three series against FC Cincinnati on the basis of overall goal differential, yet were eliminated due to the format’s game-based criteria — a scenario that sparked league-wide debate about clarity and competitive logic.
The dismissal drew criticism from analysts and supporters, and added an unexpected footnote to an otherwise strong season under Nancy.
The early exit didn’t create tension inside the club. Still, it did intensify outside questions about whether a coach of his profile might eventually look abroad for a league with clearer competitive structures.
Those involved in the process emphasize that conversations are still in an exploratory stage. Compensation, staffing, family considerations, and Celtic’s internal review remain outstanding. But the Scottish club’s interest is real — and increasingly public — placing Nancy among the most prominent names on the shortlist.
Nancy, 48, has become one of the defining coaches of MLS’s modern era. His Columbus teams are known for precision in buildup, flexible pressing structures, and a clear tactical identity — qualities that translate well in Europe.
His résumé is already elite by MLS standards:
Celtic views him as a progressive thinker who can innovate within tight budgets — a crucial requirement after Brendan Rodgers’ resignation earlier this season.
But the deeper storyline is this:
If Celtic sees Nancy as a top-tier coaching mind, why weren’t MLS’s biggest clubs positioning themselves sooner?
LAFC, Seattle, Toronto, and Inter Miami all underwent technical resets in the past two seasons. None made a serious attempt to bring in Nancy. Now Europe is making the first move — and MLS is reacting instead of leading.
Nothing is signed. Nothing is agreed. But the window is open, and Celtic is pushing.
Whether Nancy ultimately chooses to leave or stay, the mere fact that he is a serious candidate for a European giant is a watershed moment for MLS managers.
It shows that MLS coaching ideas are finally resonating abroad — but also highlights the league’s vulnerability. MLS has cultivated high-level tactical talent, yet often fails to retain it.
If Europe can spot an elite MLS coach faster than LAFC, Miami, or Galaxy…
What does that say about MLS’s internal ambition?
The question becomes sharper with Nancy because he fits the exact profile MLS clubs claim to desire: modern, analytical, adaptable, and proven under league constraints.
If he stays, MLS gets a reprieve.
If he leaves, the league must confront why it never fought to keep him.
Ao vivo









































