Roberto De Zerbi has left Olympique de Marseille after a brutal run of results, including a 5-0 hammering by Paris Saint-Germain and a damaging Champions League exit.
The club confirmed on Wednesday that both parties ended their working relationship “by mutual agreement”, bringing De Zerbi’s short spell in France to an abrupt end.
The decision follows Marseille’s humiliating defeat at Parc des Princes on Sunday, a result that reignited pressure from fans and club leadership.
De Zerbi’s departure also comes just weeks after Marseille lost 3-0 away to Club Brugge, a result that ended their European campaign early and exposed serious tactical and defensive problems.
For Marseille supporters and football fans in the UK who closely follow Ligue 1, this is another sign of Marseille’s ongoing instability, and a reminder that even highly rated coaches can unravel quickly under intense pressure.
Why Did Marseille Sack Roberto De Zerbi Now?
Marseille’s leadership acted after a major collapse in both domestic and European competitions.
The turning point was the 5-0 defeat against PSG, Marseille’s fiercest rivals and the dominant force in French football. The result not only embarrassed Marseille publicly but also damaged their league momentum at a crucial stage of the season.
PSG’s win restored their two-point lead over Lens at the top of Ligue 1 after 21 rounds, while Marseille sat in fourth place, a worrying position for a club that expects Champions League football every year.
However, the Champions League failure arguably caused even more serious damage. Marseille’s 3-0 defeat to Club Brugge two weeks earlier knocked them out of the competition, costing them prestige, momentum, and potentially millions in prize money.
In their official statement, Marseille made it clear that the decision came from the very top.
🚨 BREAKING: Roberto De Zerbi and Olympique Marseille part ways with immediate effect.
Decision made following direct talks & reflections between parties, as @FabriceHawkins reports.
No issues between De Zerbi, the club management and players.
De Zerbi believes it’s best… pic.twitter.com/RJwmYxkQ0L
— Fabrizio Romano (@FabrizioRomano) February 10, 2026
Marseille statement: “Following consultations involving all stakeholders in the club’s leadership, the owner, president, director of football and head coach, it was decided to opt for a change at the head of the first team.”
Marseille statement: “This was a collective and difficult decision, taken after thorough consideration, in the best interests of the club and to address the sporting challenges of the end of the season.”
That wording strongly suggests Marseille felt they had no choice but to reset quickly before the campaign slipped further.
How Bad Were Marseille’s Recent Results Under De Zerbi?
The numbers paint a clear picture: Marseille’s decline was sharp and public.
Marseille’s Key Results That Triggered the Exit
| Match | Competition | Result | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| PSG vs Marseille | Ligue 1 | 5-0 loss | Major humiliation, fan outrage |
| Club Brugge vs Marseille | Champions League | 3-0 loss | Knocked Marseille out of Europe |
| Ligue 1 position after 21 games | Domestic season | 4th | Top-three hopes under threat |
These results didn’t just harm the league table, they damaged belief in De Zerbi’s project.
For many Marseille fans, losing is painful, but losing without structure or fight is unforgivable. The PSG match, in particular, looked like a complete collapse rather than a close defeat.
What Did Roberto De Zerbi Achieve at Marseille?
Despite the messy ending, De Zerbi did deliver some positives during his time in charge.
He led Marseille to second place last season, which initially strengthened his reputation in France and gave the club hope of rebuilding a stable identity.
De Zerbi also arrived with strong credibility in the UK, having earned widespread praise for his work at Brighton & Hove Albion, where he built a reputation for:
- possession-based attacking football
- bold tactical systems
- developing players into high-value assets
His Brighton spell made him one of the most discussed managers in Europe, and Marseille’s decision to hire him in 2024 felt like a statement of ambition.
But Marseille is not Brighton. The pressure is heavier, the fanbase is more demanding, and the margin for error is far smaller.
Why Did De Zerbi’s Marseille Project Collapse So Quickly?
The biggest issue appeared to be that De Zerbi’s tactical identity stopped producing results.
At his best, De Zerbi’s system relies on defenders playing calmly under pressure, midfielders recycling possession quickly, and the team building play from the back. When it works, it looks modern and controlled.
But when it fails, it leaves teams exposed.
In Marseille’s case, recent matches showed:
- defensive gaps in transition
- Poor recovery runs when losing the ball
- confusion over pressing triggers
- Costly individual mistakes under pressure
Observers in France also questioned De Zerbi’s selection decisions in key matches, suggesting he overthought tactical setups during high-stakes fixtures.
The PSG game became a symbol of that collapse: Marseille looked overwhelmed from the first whistle.
After the defeat, De Zerbi reportedly apologised to supporters, a moment that highlighted the tension between the manager and the fanbase.
Is Marseille Becoming a “Manager Graveyard” Under Frank McCourt?
Marseille’s coaching instability has become a long-running story.
Since American businessman Frank McCourt bought the club in 2016, Marseille have struggled to maintain long-term stability at the top. Several managerial spells have ended in conflict, controversy, or disappointment.
The club’s history makes this even more frustrating. Marseille were once France’s dominant side, winning major honours in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
They also remain the only French club to win the Champions League, achieving the feat long before PSG’s rise. Marseille have not won Ligue 1 since 2010, and each season without a title increases the sense of decline.
That’s the pressure De Zerbi walked into, and ultimately couldn’t survive.
Who Will Replace Roberto De Zerbi at Marseille?
Marseille have not yet announced a replacement, leaving uncertainty ahead of their next match.
The club face Strasbourg on Saturday, meaning they have little time to organise a permanent appointment. A caretaker manager may take charge while Marseille search for a longer-term option.
For UK football watchers, this matters because Marseille remain a major European club with strong transfer market influence. A new manager could reshape recruitment plans quickly, including targets from Premier League sides.
What Does This Mean for PSG and Ligue 1?
The timing benefits PSG. The 5-0 win didn’t just deliver three points; it delivered a psychological blow to one of their biggest rivals. With PSG holding a two-point lead over Lens, their title chase remains firmly on track.
For Ligue 1 as a product, this also reinforces a growing theme: PSG remain the league’s dominant power, while challengers struggle to stay consistent.
For Marseille, losing De Zerbi mid-season risks making their Champions League qualification fight even harder.



