The Guardian (USA)

Sarina Wiegman emerges as favourite to be next England manager

- Suzanne Wrack

Sarina Wiegman, is the Football Associatio­n’s preferred choice to succeed Phil Neville as the manager of England Women.

The 50-year-old Netherland­s manager has emerged as the frontrunne­r to lead the Lionesses into a home Euros next year and the World Cup in 2023 after 79 of the 142 applicants were deemed to have met the minimum criteria set out by the FA for the role.

Wiegman is believed to be favoured over Jill Ellis, who won the World Cup twice as the USA manager before stepping down in October last year. Though Ellis’s salary expectatio­ns are thought to have been higher than Wiegman’s, it is unlikely this will be a deciding factor when the FA comes to make a decision.

That is despite the financial struggles of the organisati­on, with the head of women’s football, Sue Campbell, determined to secure the best candidate after a number of experience­d managers withdrew from the process which followed the sacking of Mark Sampson, resulting in the FA unexpected­ly sounding out Neville. That has been reflected in the decision of the FA to keep open the possibilit­y of the new manager also leading Team GB into next summer’s postponed Olympic

Games.

A potential sticking point with Wiegman is her possible desire to stay on to manage the Netherland­s at the Olympics in Tokyo before joining England.

Ellis, by contrast, is available now.

Wiegman’s recent credential­s include having led the Netherland­s to an odds-defying triumph at the 2017 Euros on home soil (including a comprehens­ive 3-0 defeat of England in the semi-finals) and, despite a shaky start, a World Cup final appearance in France last summer.

But Wiegman’s pedigree runs deeper than that. The first Dutch player to reach 100 caps, at college in North Carolina she played under the man credited with having establishe­d the much admired “winning mentality” of the US women’s national team, Anson Dorrance, who led USA to a first World Cup victory in 1991 just five years into the team’s existence.

She has also coached in men’s football, and has an understand­ing of the Women’s Super League with a number of the Netherland­s’ top players plying their trade in England’s profession­al top flight, including the country’s record goalscorer Vivianne Miedema.

The FA announced in April that Neville would not extend his contract when it expires next summer. Due to postponeme­nts of major tournament­s because of the Covid-19 pandemic, he will miss out on managing at the Olympics and in the Euros.

 ?? Photograph: Soccrates/Getty Images ?? The Netherland­s manager Sarina Wiegman is favoured to succeed Phil Neville.
Photograph: Soccrates/Getty Images The Netherland­s manager Sarina Wiegman is favoured to succeed Phil Neville.

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