Terminally sick Sven-Goran Eriksson lifts the lid on his affairs

Terminally-ill Sven-Göran Eriksson has admitted he was ‘stupid’ to have cheated on Nancy Dell’Ollio with Ulrika Jonsson and Faria Alam but insists sex should be celebrated and ‘I didn’t do anything criminal’.

The 76-year-old Swede made headlines around the world due to his philandering while managing England’s golden generation between 2001 and 2006.

Speaking on a new Amazon Prime documentary about his life, called ‘Sven’, he talks  openly about his affairs.

But he insists that ‘sex is one of the good things in life for all of us’, he wasn’t married and didn’t break any hearts.

His reputation was hurt by his affairs and he has revealed that at the height of his fame he met Tony Blair for tea at 10 Downing Street and the Labour PM joked: ‘Shall we take a bet? Who keeps the job longest, you or me? We have two impossible jobs’.

And poignantly speaking about his terminal pancreatic cancer he said: ‘Whoever it was said “life is too short” is right. I had a good life, maybe too good. You have to pay for it. I think we all are scared of the day when it’s finished, when you die. You have to learn to accept it for what it is’.

Nancy Dell’Olio also spoke to Amazon Prime and reveals how she almost left him over his affair with Ulrika – but her lawyer advised her not to and she also liked being the ‘first lady of English football’ so stayed with him

Former manager of England national football team Sven-Goran ‘Svennis’ Eriksson is honoured for his efforts at local club Degerfors in June. He is terminally ill with pancreatic cancer

Nancy Dell’Olio has told a new documentary how she almost left Sven over his ‘stupid’ affair with  Ulrika Jonsson – but her lawyer advised her not to

Faria Alam, who was Sven’s secretary when they had an affair, says she was in love with him 

The decorated football coach, who took a conservative approach on the pitch, had relationships with a string of much younger women off it.

He was in a relationship with Italian lawyer Nancy for almost a decade but then affairs with Swedish model and journalist Ulrika Jonsson and former Football Association secretary Faria Alam.

Sven concedes that his reputation was hurt by his affairs, but he didn’t feel he did anything terrible.

Talking about when his fling with Ulrika emerged, he said: ‘Sex is one of the good things in life for all of us. She was not married. I was not married.

‘Probably I was stupid but I think I didn’t do anything criminal. I didn’t really disturb anyone.’

Nancy wanted to leave him – but changed her mind.

Sven said: ‘She loved it. The tension. She was a lady from the upper classes in Rome. She liked to go out with important people.

‘In the beginning I didn’t react very much. But you don’t change people at a certain age. It was not peace in my house always.’

Nancy said she loved Sven. 

She said: ‘The first impression that I had about Sven, people in power always have extra, extra sex appeal. I felt in love.

‘It wasn’t something that I was looking for. I was married and I left my husband to start my journey with Sven.

‘We were Sven and Nancy since the first date.

‘I was the first lady of English football and there was never going to be another one after me.’

She went on: ‘The stupidity of Sven. After Sven’s first scandal, I wanted to leave him.

‘I couldn’t want to admit to myself that there was a possibility that I made a mistake. That I left everything for him. My lawyers said give him another chance but think what you can get from this.’

Sven Goran Eriksson told Swedish radio he has cancer and may only have a year to live in January

Sven-Goran Eriksson remains with his girlfriend Yaniseth Bravo in Sweden, she says she will no give up hope that he will beat cancer

Between 2001 and 2006 he guided the so-called ‘golden generation’ of stars including David Beckham, Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard but never won the major trophy that was expected

Rumours of Eriksson’s relationship with TV presenter Ulrika Jonsson emerged in 2002 and were later confirmed.  Ulrika said that sex with Sven-Göran Eriksson was as ‘boring as building an Ikea bookcase’

Eriksson returned to his long-term partner, the Italian lawyer Nancy Dell’Olio, who says she enjoyed being the ‘first lady of English football’

Eriksson’s affair with FA secretary Faria Alam was all over the papers during 2004. He lost his job months later

Faria Alam had an affair with Sven and FA chief executive Mark Palios. She was forced to resign but gave a series of kiss and tell interviews.

Speaking to the documentary she said: ‘The Noughties were just that, they were naughty.

‘You could do so many things. I’ll be honest, I was a beautiful girl and I attracted a lot of attention.

‘He said, “Tell your story, go and tell them everything. Make some money, why not?”.’

Reports at the time suggested she may have made £300,000 from deals with newspapers. 

Describing their relationship she said: ‘He didn’t have the mindset of a super-rich man. He talked to me about poetry, he talked to me about art. 

‘He was saying how he did yoga and things like that.

‘And I just fell in love with him, I guess. And that lit the fuse for all this to explode’.

But she was angry at being painted as a ‘gold digger’ when the story broke, adding: ‘I’m the person that’s the bad person, and I was the scapegoat for them to be relieved of any responsibility’.

The documentary, released next week on Prime, comes after Sven revealed in January that he was terminally ill with cancer and was told he had a year to live.

‘Hopefully, at the end people will say, ‘Yeah, he was a good man’. But everyone will not say that. I hope you will remember me as a positive guy and trying to do everything he could do. Don’t be sorry. Smile’, he said.

He lives in Sweden near Sunne, in Värmland, where he grew up.

His partner Yaniseth Alcides, a former dancer he met in Mexico, is caring for him.

She said: ‘I have hope that we will be together for many more years. I will not lose that hope.’

Sven adds: ‘It’s a beautiful place. It makes me calm, below the mountain where my father grew up.

‘The ashes could be thrown into the water here.’

The football manager was England boss between 2001 and 2006. Sven pictured with David Beckham after dumped out of the 2006 World Cup by Portugal in the quarter final

England’s unforgettable 5-1 win in Munich offered hope Eriksson could deliver success

David Beckham’s last-gasp free-kick against Greece sent England to the 2002 World Cup

But David Seaman’s horrendous misjudgement of Ronaldinho’s free-kick cost England at the world cup in 2002

Eriksson took England to three major quarter-finals and lost twice on penalties. Their first loss came in the 2004 European Champions. Beckham fired his penalty over the bar (above) 

The 2006 World Cup saw England crash out again to Portugal after Rooney’s red card

In a glittering managerial career Sven was boss of IFK Gothenburg, Benfica, Roma, Roma, Fiorentina, Sampdoria, Lazio, Manchester City and Leicester City.

He was also manager of Mexico, Ivory Coast and the Philippines.

But while in charge of England for five years he became the most famous football manager in the world.

Between 2001 and 2006 he guided the so-called ‘golden generation’ of stars including David Beckham, Steven Gerrard and Frank Lampard but never won the major trophy that was expected.

His tragic diagnosis came almost exactly 22 years after he resigned as Lazio manager earlier than expected to assume his coaching role with England. 

The Swede had signed a five-year contract three months earlier to take over in the summer of 2001.

Eriksson said his Lazio side ‘were one of the best in the world’ and he was probably correct.

But that ‘once in a lifetime’ chance to manage England, and the £3million salary that came with it, proved too good to turn down.

Eriksson soon revitalised a long-failing England side. The team’s thumping 5-1 win over Germany offering great optimism and flipping the qualifying group for World Cup 2002, even if it took Beckham’s last-minute free-kick against Greece to avoid a tricky play-off with Ukraine.

Eriksson demanded his private life should remain private but the job was too much in the white hot glare of the spotlight for that to wash.

On the pitch, England laboured through their World Cup group but gathered momentum by battering Denmark.

In the quarter-final with Brazil, England led through Owen but David Seaman’s hapless misjudgement of Ronaldinho’s flighted free-kick five minutes after half-time saw them trailing.

‘We wanted Winston Churchill and we got Iain Duncan Smith,’ Southgate famously said of Eriksson’s limp half-time team talk but it was his dithering over subs and tactics when Ronaldinho was sent off with 33 minutes left that ultimately cost England.

England will likely never have a better chance to win a World Cup. If they’d overcome 10-man Brazil, they would have faced Turkey in the semi-finals and a Germany team they’d recently thrashed 5-1 in the final.

Eriksson continued but a year later was spotted with Chelsea chief executive Peter Kenyon, leading to paper speculation he was about to reap the rewards of Roman Abramovich’s arrival.

In the end, the FA were the ones that panicked, tabling an extended contract until 2008 at £5m-a-year.

And when an England side that were booed off at Upton Park after losing a friendly to Australia and could only draw 2-2 at home to Macedonia before scraping qualification for Euro 2004, the omens weren’t good.

So it proved. Recovering from opening night defeat to France, a team powered up by 18-year-old Rooney swept aside Switzerland and Croatia to set up a quarter-final with hosts Portugal.

Again England squandered an early lead given them by Owen before Sol Campbell saw a goal disallowed in extra time and the inevitable exit on penalties.

The talents of the so-called ‘Golden Generation’ were patently going to waste but sacking Sven was too expensive for the FA to contemplate.

He laboured on but when details of his affair with FA secretary Faria Alam emerged two months after the tournament, another chunk of credibility was chipped away.

There was an easy tabloid contrast to be drawn between his impassive observations from the bench and apparent energy behind drawn curtains.

By the time the 2006 World Cup rolled around, Eriksson had been duped by the News of the World’s ‘Fake Sheikh’ Mazher Mahmood, betraying confidences about players and clubs. 

FA chief executive Brian Barwick cut short Eriksson’s contract, with a reduced pay-off, and told him to deliver success in the tournament in Germany. But they failed at the quarter-final stage again.

  • SVEN is on Prime Video in the UK, Ireland and Nordics on August 23.