Business Day

Southgate bookies’ favourite to replace humiliated Hodgson

- AGENCY STAFF London

ENGLAND Under-21 coach Gareth Southgate is the early favourite of a shortish list of mooted candidates to replace Roy Hodgson as coach of England following their embarrassi­ng exit at Euro 2016.

Having flirted with foreign coaches such as SvenGoran Eriksson and autocratic Italian Fabio Capello before bringing in the vastly experience­d Hodgson, the Football Associatio­n (FA) are likely to go for an Englishman if the bookies are to be believed.

However, the list is not very long and of the Englishmen mentioned not one has won a trophy, which hardly augurs well in rebuilding the morale of a side that lost 2-1 in such abject fashion to minnows Iceland on Monday — likened to the shock loss to the largely amateur USA at the 1950 World Cup.

Southgate — perhaps best known for missing a penalty in the Euro 1996 semifinal penalty shoot-out against Germany at Wembley — restored some of his reputation with victory at the prestigiou­s Toulon tournament last month having had a disappoint­ing European U-21 campaign last year.

The 45-year-old, who has been in charge of the U-21 side since 2013, has managed just one club, Middlesbro­ugh, whom he kept in the Premier League for two seasons before they were relegated in the 2008-09 campaign.

Southgate is now 6/4 favourite with the bookies having been 6/1 on Monday night once Hodgson’s assistant, former Manchester United star Gary Neville, also resigned after the Iceland defeat.

Others in the frame include the combative Alan Pardew, who guided Crystal Palace to the FA Cup final last term, losing 2-1 to Manchester United in extra time. However, with no silverware in his cabinet over his career as a manager and his straightta­lking he may not fit the FA’s ideal image of the England manager.

The young hope is Eddie Howe, who has impressed at Bournemout­h, the 38-year-old taking them into the Premier League for the first time in their history and retaining their status last season. However, by the same token his inexperien­ce at the top level may mark him out as one to watch for the future once he gets into his stride.

Former England captain Alan Shearer has indicated he would like a go but his sole experience at managerial level is an unhappy spell at his beloved Newcastle United.

Scotsman David Moyes and Northern Irishman Brendan Rodgers have also been mentioned, but the former has not flourished since early promise at Everton — Manchester United and Real Sociedad being notable failures — while Rodgers has just taken over the reins at Scottish champions Celtic.

Perhaps the man that a few years ago England and the FA would have yearned for, Arsenal’s longservin­g Frenchman Arsene Wenger, still figures on the bookies’ lists but the feeling is largely his time has passed — would he at 66 really want to take on the extraordin­ary pressure the job brings?

 ??  ?? Gareth Southgate
Gareth Southgate

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