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Rodley Mariner |
September 29, 2016, 7:15pm |
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Half the challenge will be finding somebody who wants it. After Roy was sacked Southgate categorically stated he wasn't ready and didn't want it.
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moosey_club |
September 29, 2016, 7:49pm |
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Neil Woods could win that qualifying group before going out in the first/second round so does it even matter?
Woods no good for tournament football...it took him about 23 games to get a win
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| 2023/24 DLWDDWDLLLWDLLLLWDDDWDLLWLDLLDWDDWLLDWLWLW 2022/23LDWDWWDWLLDWWDLLLDLWLLWLWLLWDDLDWWDDDLLWDWLWLW 2021/22 WDWWWWDLWWWWLLLWLLDLWLLWWDWWWLWDLWWDWWWDLWD play offs WWW Promoted 🥳 2020/21 LLDWWLDLDWLWLLLDLWLLDLLDLLLWLLLDDDDWDDDLWLWLWL .. hello darkness my old friend 2019/20 WDLDWWLDLWWLLLDLDLDLDDWWDLLWDDWWL WLLW - ended 2018/19 LWDDLLLLLLWWDWLLLWDWLWWWWLLLLWWWWDLLLDDLLDLWLW Hello Scunny |
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rancido |
September 29, 2016, 8:15pm |
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Whoever it is I hope he is English. It doesn't matter to me if there are better foreign coaches available , the main criteria should be that he has English credentials ( just like the payers). When Alf Ramsey was appointed England manager he had never managed a top flight team until he took Ipswich into the First Division and then for less than 2 seasons.
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golfer |
September 29, 2016, 10:13pm |
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Whoever it is I hope he is English. It doesn't matter to me if there are better foreign coaches available , the main criteria should be that he has English credentials ( just like the payers). When Alf Ramsey was appointed England manager he had never managed a top flight team until he took Ipswich into the First Division and then for less than 2 seasons.
entirely agree.
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Abdul19 |
September 30, 2016, 11:36am |
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Woods no good for tournament football...it took him about 23 games to get a win
Worked alright for Portugal this summer
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ginnywings |
September 30, 2016, 1:25pm |
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Wenger saying he is open to the England job "one day". For me, the problem with managers like Wenger is that they just don't have enough time to work with the players and instill their methods on the team. That's why i thought Allardyce was a good choice as someone who would keep it simple and play to our strengths, rather than someone who will try and out-football the better sides.
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acko338 |
September 30, 2016, 2:50pm |
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Am I alone in not being bothered - fed up of broken promises and early exits?
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TheRonRaffertyFanClub |
September 30, 2016, 3:15pm |
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Am I alone in not being bothered - fed up of broken promises and early exits?
You should be acko118 - You are not alone. We ARE a loan! We are all more than a bit cheesed with the FA, with the players and the managers since 1996 I guess. The flop in the tournaments was acceptable if it was the semis or even the quarters but now we don't look as though we could beat a blind school team. Having said that, after the 1962 world cup nobody actually rated Ramsey's appointment and until the quarter final against Argentina there was not much interest or optimism about the team's chances. It was only in that game and the Portugal game that things started to come together for the fans. Which is why I thought Allardyce was a good choice. He would keep things simple and manage the players like Jack Charlton did with Eire and play to the players' strengths. I can't see someone like Southgate doing that, he'd be too European in his approach and too soft with the players. He's already told Rooney he's captain for the next two games when the bloke is struggling with the realisation he isn't even good enough to play for his club any more.
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promotion plaice |
September 30, 2016, 8:01pm |
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Some suggestions in the media -
Roberto Mancini
Touted as one of the favourites by many bookies, Mancini has the experience of English football that the governing body seem to crave so dearly. The Italian led Manchester City to their historic Premier League title in 2012, and has since returned to Italy – via Turkey – to manage Inter Milan for the second time.
As a manager, Mancini produces sides that are well structured, but he is unafraid of making changes to alter a game. He brings plans into a match, knowing he has cards to play in certain scenarios. For England this would be beneficial. Able to use the depth of resources currently available, he would utilise the whole of the squad effectively.
Mancini has experience in managing some of the game’s more challenging characters, which should make dealing with the uncomfortable Wayne Rooney issue a doddle.
Marcelo Bielsa
It is hard to imagine the Football Association and Marcelo Bielsa getting along too well. Whether it would work or not is anyone’s guess, but it would be fun finding out.
One of the game’s tactical revolutionaries, Bielsa would be a shock to the rigid English game. The Argentine is currently out of work, too, making an appointment potentially painless. It is a fantasy for many of Bielsa’s fans and it would take quite a change of heart from the FA.
A man that has been labelled the ‘best manager in the world’ by Pep Guardiola and lists some of the game’s greatest as his disciples, Bielsa is far more than an adventurous tactician. He could bring a new understanding of the game to England and we would all be better off for his marathon press conferences.
Manuel Pellegrini
Since leaving Manchester City last summer, Pellegrini has been managing Chinese side, Hebei China Fortune. Like the other two candidates on this list, Pellegrini is an immensely knowledgeable and experienced manager. His career as a gaffer began in 1988, with spells on three different continents leading him to periods at both Man City and Real Madrid.
Having spent three seasons in the Premier League, Pellegrini would be able to go straight into management without a period learning about the players available to him. The natural understanding of what he would want from each individual still takes time, but he would have a potential advantage over others that he has first-hand experience of these players.
English football needs a calm leader as claims of corruption spread across the leagues, Pellegrini fits the bill perfectly.
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