WASHINGTON -- United States coach Jurgen Klinsmann responded on Monday to former manager Bob Bradley's remark that he was "jockeying" for the U.S. coaching job in 2010, a year before he replaced Bradley at the American helm, by saying the claim is "simply not true."
Bradley was sacked by U.S. Soccer president Sunil Gulati after the U.S. lost the 2011 Gold Cup final to Mexico. He went on to coach Egypt's national team from 2011-'13, leading them to within a game of their first World Cup berth in 24 years amid political chaos in the country.
He then had successful stints with clubs in Norway and France before becoming the first American to helm an English Premier League team when Swansea City hired him as their new boss on Oct.