WHO ARE THE FAVOURITES TO BE THE NEXT ENGLAND MANAGER AFTER GARETH SOUTHGATE?

Let’s have a look at the latest front-runners to be the next England manager, shall we?

Why now? Well, Gareth Southgate has rather conveniently emerged as the favourite for the Manchester United job, raising the real prospect of him leaving after the Euros this summer.

It’s certainly a very different list to the last time we did this just after England got knocked out of the World Cup and Southgate thought about leaving which, in hindsight, might have been for the best. The top 10 in the betting back then contained Arsene Wenger and Wayne Rooney. And Frank Lampard. Mauricio Pochettino was favourite. Cheeseburgers were a penny. The internet was black and white. It was a different time.

Anyway, here’s the current top 10 based on best available odds…

 

10) Mauricio Pochettino

Not quite as beguiling or even as likely a prospect as it was after the World Cup. And again, it probably requires an amount of club-level failure to make it feasible that by definition makes him less appealing still. And yet. It could still be brilliant. Especially if you feel Gareth Southgate has this group playing with the handbrake not fully released. England absolutely have the players for a Pochettino 4-2-3-1. The age profile of this England squad with all those brilliant younglings would also fit Pochettino’s reputation for moulding and improving young players.

 

9) Thomas Tuchel

Was reportedly keen when Southgate was considering his options after the World Cup, and has a genuine affection for English football. He is not, though, a unifying figure. His hold on the Bayern Munich job has been severed, with his tendency to rub players and suits up the wrong way not a brilliant long-term career strategy. Proven ability to coach Harry Kane into scoring lots of goals against mediocre opposition a bonus, but perhaps an unnecessary one. Not sure how much help Kane really needs on that score.

READ: A step-by-step guide to show Harry Kane has actually scored precisely zero proper goals for England

 

8) Jose Mourinho

Jose has already been offered the job – 17 years ago. “I could have been the coach of national team, I had it there on the table,” he revealed recently.

“[I turned it down] because I always had national team jobs as something I wouldn’t enjoy. It was in 2007-08 and Mr Capello got the job.”

A generation later, Mourinho might be more open to another approach from the FA, if only because his current options aren’t as grand as they were during peak-Jose.

 

7) Jurgen Klopp

Oh we can but dream. But then accept that should he decide that an international job is as good as a rest, he is far more likely to take over Germany.

 

6) Steven Gerrard

Great, another manager who’ll pick Jordan Henderson until the seas boil and claim us all. Brilliant. Don’t worry, though. It’s going to be fiendishly hard for Gerrard to salvage a reputation damaged significantly by Villa’s struggles under him and enormous subsequent improvement under Unai Emery, even harder to do so in Saudi Arabia, and almost impossible to do so before the England job comes up. We’re not having this one.

 

5) Steve Cooper

We like Steve. Did decently at a batsh*t Forest, and having an Under-17 World Cup win with a squad including Phil Foden, Marc Guehi, Emile Smith Rowe and Jadon Sancho on the CV doesn’t do any harm at all. That international age-group experience coupled with doing an eye-catchingly good Premier League job does make this seem pretty feasible. The FA also tend to adopt a ‘British Isles’ definition of home-grown when coming up with ‘Desirable’ qualifications for the job advert, so not even Cooper’s Welshness should harm his chances any.

 

4) Pep Guardiola

England’s tip-top number one choice for after the Euros, apparently. Fair enough, you’d have to say. He’s quite good. Might just decide he’s done all that can be done at Manchester City, but will have a desk full of extremely lucrative offers and might even decide on another sabbatical rather than jumping straight into work as and when he does leave the Etihad. Can easily see why England would desperately want to make this happen, harder to see why Pep would.

 

3) Lee Carsley

Led England’s Under-21s to a brilliant win at the Euros last summer and would represent something like a Continuity Southgate candidate in CV if not necessarily style. Has agreed to stay on as Under-21 coach for the next qualifying campaign and at the very least is therefore in prime position for a caretaker role should Southgate unexpectedly walk. Seems happy in his work – quite understandably given how well it’s going – and isn’t actively looking elsewhere, even reportedly turning down the Irish job.

 

2) Graham Potter

Potter was a very flaky favourite in a very open market but does currently have ‘availability’ on his side. By far the likeliest scenario is that this job comes up after England are narrowly beaten following a gallant but vaguely what-might-have-been display in the Euro 2024 quarter-finals. And Potter will likely still be available.

His reputation is undoubtedly tarnished from the Chelsea unpleasantness, but let’s not entirely forget what he started at Brighton. Consistently got them punching above their weight and is a brilliant tactician, while the xG issues that have plagued his teams should be less of an issue with this England team.

He’d be making the move from day-to-day coaching very young, though, and there’s an inherent paradox: he’s favourite because he’s available but the longer he remains available the less likely he is to get the job. And if he stops being available, he also becomes less likely to get the job. We don’t think it’s going to be Potter, is what we’re saying here.

 

1) Eddie Howe

Another one that highlights some of the strangeness of the England job. If Newcastle were thriving, it’s hard to see him walking out on that job. But if he does well enough not to trash his reputation but not quite well enough to make Newcastle desperate to keep him or stop them moving on to one of those serial winner coaches they have for clubs who want to make the Next Step, then you could easily see how everyone involved might be quite keen on Eddie Howe, England manager as a concept.

2022-12-12T13:51:49Z dg43tfdfdgfd