CF MontrĂ©al have parted ways with head coach HernĂ¡n Losada, the club announced Thursday. Assistant coach SebastiĂ¡n Setti has also been let go.
Losada ultimately spent one season in charge of CFMTL, who missed the Audi MLS Cup Playoffs following a 2-1 loss at Columbus Crew on Decision Day. They finished 10th in the Eastern Conference standings (41 points; 12W-17L-5D).
"Following the assessment of the season, it was determined this decision is in the club's best interest for 2024 and beyond," read a Montréal statement. "The selection process for CF Montréal’s next head coach for the 2024 season is actively underway."
Brief tenure
Losada lasted just over 10 months in Montréal, arriving shortly after Wilfried Nancy left to join the Crew in what was essentially a coach trade (Montréal were compensated).
The move marked Losada’s return to the MLS sidelines after he previously led D.C. United from 2021 until early into the 2022 season. It also raised some questions after Losada’s controversial exit from the Black-and-Red, as well as his unique tactical approach.
Results
Despite a strong run from late April through late August, Montréal struggled down the stretch and won just one of their last nine games. Their 36 goals scored were the fourth-fewest in MLS, and a 2W-13L-2D mark away from Stade Saputo weighed them down.
Big picture, Montréal regressed from a club-record 2022 season that saw them finish third in the Supporters’ Shield race under Nancy, then a Sigi Schmid Coach of the Year finalist. They earned 24 fewer points and lost in the Canadian Championship final at Vancouver Whitecaps FC.
Roster status
Further, Losada’s year in charge was arguably hamstrung by Montréal transferring defender Alistair Johnston (to Celtic), midfielder Ismaël Koné (to Watford) and midfielder Djordje Mihailovic (to AZ Alkmaar) to European sides. Other key pieces from their 2022 squad departed as well – striker Kei Kamara (to Chicago Fire FC) and defender Kamal Miller (to Inter Miami CF) were traded within MLS – and veterans like striker Romell Quioto and midfielder Samuel Piette battled injuries.
Now, Montréal are the 11th team in MLS to make a coaching change this season (eighth in the Eastern Conference). Whoever takes over at the Canadian club inherits a youthful roster that’s highlighted by goalkeeper Jonathan Sirois, defender Joel Waterman, midfielder Mathieu Choinière, forward Kwadwo Opoku and more. Montréal also have some Designated Player and U22 Initiative roster slot flexibility, pending investment from ownership.