Sam Allardyce, who is in
Austria on a pre‑season
tour with Sunderland, has been invited to meet with the FA after being
identified as the best option of all the available Englishmen.
Sam Allardyce will be
interviewed for the England job this week and offered the chance to convince
the Football Association he is better suited for the role than Jürgen
Klinsmann, the other leading candidate in a process the people in charge hope
to finalise within the next two weeks.
The FA also intends to
discuss the vacancy with Klinsmann and has been made aware that the USA team
manager would be tempted by the job. However, Allardyce appeals to the FA for
more reasons than simply his nationality when the organisation is looking for
someone who will work within the current St George’s Park structure and,
ideally, fit in with their own blueprint for English football. Klinsmann also
ticks a lot of the boxes but he has a record of bringing his own staff and
wanting to go his own way.
While Klinsmann’s
independent streak may sound reasonable to many England followers after the
ordeal of Euro 2016, the FA’s stubborn belief is that its system is not broken.
England qualified with 10 straight wins and the FA is prioritising a
strong-minded manager who will bring a greater degree of certainty to the squad
in terms of playing style and selection.Allardyce would still represent a
controversial selection bearing in mind his reputation for unattractive
football – something he has always claimed was overblown – and the improvement
at West Ham United since Slaven Bilic replaced him as manager. It is also
understood there are people within the FA, outside of the three-man selection
panel, who dislike the idea.
Allardyce, nonetheless,
features prominently in the thoughts of the FA technical director, Dan
Ashworth, the chief executive, Martin Glenn, and Gill when it comes to
possessing the experience, track record and personality. His restoration work
at Sunderland, saving them from relegation last season, counts in his favour
and the 61-year-old is still keen to manage his country after being
interviewed, unsuccessfully, for the role when he was manager of Bolton
Wanderers in 2006. The job went to Steve McClaren and Allardyce has harboured a
grievance ever since.
“I wanted to do a real
knock-your-socks-off interview for the FA, so I put together a PowerPoint which
looked at every single detail,” he wrote in his autobiography. “There was
nothing missing. Nobody but nobody was going to beat it. But then Brian
Barwick, the chief executive, told me there were no PowerPoint facilities at
the interview venue, so I had to print off hard copies for the panel. So much
for the progressive FA.”
The FA had initially hoped
Gareth Southgate could take over on an interim basis, with Arsène Wenger
potentially available when his contract at Arsenal expired in 2017. That plan
was abandoned after Southgate informed the relevant people he did not want the
role and Wenger has now acknowledged that the timing works against him.
Wenger said: “Could I
manage England? Why not? I would never rule that out, but I am happy and
focused in club football. I have one more year to go with Arsenal and I have
been with them for a long time. I have always respected all my contracts and
will continue to do that. What will I do after that? Honestly, I don’t know.”
As well as speaking to
former players such as Gary Lineker, Rio Ferdinand and Frank Lampard, the FA
has also sought the advice of Harry Redknapp. Those discussions brought up
support for Eddie Howe, Glenn Hoddle and Guus Hiddink, among others.
The Guardian
No comments:
Post a Comment