The Scotsman

Regan defends the time it took Scottish FA to make job offer to O’neill

- By ANGUS WRIGHT

shortlist after taking more than two months to agree a compensati­on package with the Irish Football Associatio­n to allow talks with O’neill to take place.

The £500,000 figure had been stipulated in O’neill’s contract but Regan, pictured, claimed the SFA board had to think carefully before committing. O’neill was offered an improved contract by the IFA in the intervenin­g period and is set to sign a six-year deal. Regan defended the governing body’s approach to finding a manager and told STV: “There was a compensati­on package to be put together. The package we put together was very, very competitiv­e, a significan­t investment from the Scottish FA, and that took time for our board to get comfortabl­e with.

“We had said at the outset when Gordon Strachan left that we were in no rush. We don’t have a competitiv­e match until September and therefore we wanted to make sure we took time to create the right package and put our best case forward.”

Regan insisted the SFA board had been fully involved in the process and the recruitmen­t sub-committee would discuss its plan B in the “next few days”.

“I’m not the first chief exec, and I certainly won’t be the last, not to get the target that I go after,” Regan added. “We’re determined to find the right person. There are some very attractive and exciting candidates out there. Others have come towards us since Michael’s decision.”

The Nations League offers an alternativ­e chance to qualify for Euro 2020. If Scotland come top of their three-team section and finish outside of the top two in their European Championsh­ip qualifying group, they will compete with three other teams for one spot in the finals.

They could even finish second or third and be involved in a play-off if the team or teams above them qualify automatica­lly.

Albania are managed by Italian Christian Panucci, whose late header ended Scotland’s Euro 2008 qualifying hopes. Albania, who have never played Scotland, finished third in their World Cup qualifying group, behind Spain and Italy and a point ahead of Israel.

Stewart Regan has claimed several fresh candidates have put themselves forward for the Scotland job since Michael O’neill’s snub.

The SFA chief executive was speaking in Switzerlan­d as Scotland were drawn in a three-team group with Israel and Albania in the inaugural Uefa Nations League and two days after O’neill rejected the chance to succeed Gordon Strachan.

The draw in Lausanne came 104 days after Strachan lost his job, with the SFA forced to reconsider their

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