By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
KooralifeKooralifeKooralife
  • Home
  • Morocco
  • Club World Cup
  • Kooralife TV
  • بالعربية
  • Leagues
    • botola pro
    • Fifa World Cup
    • English League Championship
    • Spanish La Liga
    • Italian Serie A
    • French Ligue 1
    • English Premier League
    • Belgian Pro League
    • Dutch Eredivisie
    • German Bundesliga
    • Greek Superleague Greece
    • Scottish Premier League
Reading: Opinion Article: Hicham Ait Mana, the President Who Turned Wydad into a Game in His Hands
Font ResizerAa
KooralifeKooralife
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Morocco
  • Club World Cup
  • Kooralife TV
  • بالعربية
  • Leagues
    • botola pro
    • Fifa World Cup
    • English League Championship
    • Spanish La Liga
    • Italian Serie A
    • French Ligue 1
    • English Premier League
    • Belgian Pro League
    • Dutch Eredivisie
    • German Bundesliga
    • Greek Superleague Greece
    • Scottish Premier League
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Morocco

Opinion Article: Hicham Ait Mana, the President Who Turned Wydad into a Game in His Hands

Editorial Board
ByEditorial Board
Follow:
Share

Since Hicham Ait Mana took the helm as president of Wydad Athletic, the scene seemed like the beginning of a long-awaited “rescue” phase, especially after the departure of Saeed Nasiri, whose name was linked to a golden era that cannot be easily overlooked. Wydad’s fans, naturally hungry for titles, gave the new president unconditional trust and pinned hopes on a quick return to the winner’s podium. But what happened on the ground was closer to free fall than a consistent sports project.

Wydad, which was a few years ago the African champion and a regular guest in the final stages, quickly turned into a team that bid farewell to continental competitions at the group stages or even failed to qualify. This transformation was not destiny but a direct consequence of a series of hasty decisions that made the club appear as if it were being managed with experimental logic rather than strategic planning.

Ait Mana entered strongly, raised the bar of promises, then began execution randomly. Hiring coach Mokwena was the first test, but he clearly failed despite the time given. Bringing Brazilian players without real additions gave fans the illusion that titles were only a matter of time. Then came the team’s participation in the Club World Cup, where Wydad appeared faded, and the president chose to go with an interim coach, resulting in zero points, a scene unworthy of the club’s history even if the last match was against Al Ain.

Because superficial solutions do not fix a deep crisis, Ait Mana continued the same approach. “Star” signings like Hakim Ziyech, Wissam Ben Yedder, and Nordin Amrabat brought some hope and the team achieved a series of wins that restored its lead despite missing matches. But the surprise came at an incomprehensible timing: selling key pillars like Lorsh, Aziz Ki, and El Amrani at the start of the season, as if the team was overflowing with strength rather than needing stability.

Then came the fatal blow: a harsh elimination against Olympic Safi in a match Wydad was 99 out of 100 times closer to winning. Instead of calm analysis, the president decided to “restart the game,” firing a leading coach and bringing in Patrice Carteron at a nonsensical time. The result? A physically and psychologically collapsed team, a coach who earned two points out of 15 before he too was fired the same way, as if the club lived in a loop of hasty decisions.

The problem today is no longer with a coach or a player but in the management mindset. Ait Mana makes decisions reactively, not with vision. He changes, fires, sells, and signs without any apparent thread linking all this to a clear project. Worse, he ignores a simple fact: the problem is not the “game,” but who holds the controller.

What is even more astonishing is that the man was present during Saeed Nasiri’s era and witnessed up close how major teams are managed, yet he chose a completely different path, one that proved to fail in record time. Instead of self-review, he continues to repeat the same mistakes, as if changing coaches became an alternative to changing the way of thinking.

Behind all this looms another factor that cannot be ignored: the pressure of electoral stakes. The president, who came with a record full of controversy in Mohammedia, tried to reintroduce himself in Casablanca through Wydad’s gate, relying on the club’s overwhelming popularity. But when political calculations mix with sports management, the result is often catastrophic. Today, after only a few months, Ait Mana finds himself facing the possibility of leaving empty-handed: no notable sports success, no political gain to build on.

Wydad is bigger than being managed with a “PlayStation” logic, where settings can be reset after every loss. This is a club with history, fans, and continental weight. If this chaos continues, the losses will not be just in a season or a title but in the identity of a team that was once a reference for stability and success.

Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Most Popular

The League Bans Fan Travel After Stadium Riots

His Majesty the King Congratulates the Atlas Lions on Winning the Qatar 2025 Arab Cup

4 months ago

El Machrafi: Moroccan Games Authority Plays a Pivotal Role in Organizing and Operating Sports Competitions in Morocco

4 months ago

Subscribe Now

get latest sports news!

You Might Also Like

Morocco

Wydad: Ait Mana Postpones Members’ Meeting Amid Results Crisis

4 hours ago
Morocco

Raja Announces Squad for Professional League Clash Against FAR Rabat

2 days ago
Morocco

Raja Club Members Demand Investigation into Refereeing Decisions Against the Royal Army Club

11 hours ago
Morocco

The Lions Secure Paraguay Clash with a Brace, Steadily Continuing Preparations

1 month ago
Kooralife

It is an electronic sports newspaper updated in real time. Watch all Moroccan and international football events with us.

Socials

Facebook Instagram Youtube Linkedin

Topics

  • Morocco
  • Africa Cup of Nations
  • Kooralife TV
  • France
  • Spain
  • international
  • Germany
  • Blog
  • Kora Live TV
  • Italy
All rights reserved to KOORALIFE.COM 2025 ©
  • Advertise with us
  • Newsletters
  • Deal
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?