LONDON, Feb. 10 (Xinhua) -- Russian coach Guus
Hiddink is likely to manage Chelsea till the end of the season after Russian
football chiefs gave him greenlight to combine the two roles on Tuesday.
The Russian Football Union (RFU) confirmed in a
statement that they had no objection against the Dutchman doing both jobs while
Chelsea, who fired former Brazil coach Luiz Felipe Scolari on Monday, are hoping
to finalize a deal before Saturday.
"The English side (Chelsea) has offered Hiddink to
coach Chelsea until the end of this English Premiership season in May," the
statement on the RFU website said.
"We are ready to agree with this proposal if coaching
of the Russian national squad remains a matter of top priority for the Dutch
coach."
Hiddink has revealed that his personal relationship
with Chelsea's owner Roman Abramovich led to his nodding for the post and he is
ready for a double role which he had played years before.
"If it was any other club my answer would be a
straight 'no', but Chelsea is different," the 62-year-old said at a Russian
training camp in Turkey.
"I have good relations with the owner Roman
Abramovich. I would like to help them if I could.
"I've already done that (combining two jobs) a couple
of years ago when I was coaching Australia and PSV (Eindhoven) so I'm familiar
with the situation and what it takes."
Abramovich, a Russian billionaire, reportedly paid
five million dollars of his own money last year to guarantee Hiddink's salary as
Russia coach.
However, Hiddink stressed his full commitment to
helping Russia qualify for the 2010 World Cup.
"This would only be for the next two or three months
until the end of the season. I will not leave my job with the Russian national
team. It's out of the question.
"When I took the Russia job it was a long-term
project and I don't like to leave it unfinished," he added.
Hiddink had brilliant achievements in his last three
jobs with Netherlands, South Korea and Australia and is working to lead a
different team into the World Cup for a fourth successive time.
The RFU also insisted that Hiddink would remain as
the country's manager until the end of 2010 World Cup.
Russia have two World Cup qualifiers over the course
of the rest of the Premier League season - at home to Azerbaijan on 28 March and
away to Liechtenstein four days later.
Earlier on Tuesday, Chelsea thanked the Russian
football association for giving them permission to talk to Hiddink.
"Chelsea Football Club can confirm it has officially
approached the Russian Football Union (RFU) for permission to speak to Guus
Hiddink to become the club's temporary coach until the end of the season while
continuing to be in charge of the Russian national team," the club said in a
statement.
Chelsea have seen sacking of four managers, including
Inter Milan boss Jose Mourinho, since Abramovich's arrival in 2003. Scolari was
fired following a poor run of results which left the team all but out of the
league title race.
Chelsea will travel to Championship strugglers
Watford in the FA Cup fifth round on Saturday, but Hiddink is understood not
likely to be present.
Hiddink led the Netherlands to a fourth place finish
in the 1998 World Cup, South Korea to the same position four years later and
took underdogs Australia to the second round in 2006. Russia's historical
breakthrough to the Euro 2008 semifinals was his latest feat.
At the club level, he won domestic and European club
titles with PSV Eindhoven.