Hasn't happened yet but I would be surprised if Hodgson carries on at Palace next year.
Seen Howe, Lampard and Dyche all being linked with the job. Sadly all seem good candidates and not immediately obvious who is most likely to muck things up there.
Will be another yes man, step forward Steve Mclaren.
He was my bet for the ex-England manager that TS mentioned last night that applied for LB's job.
Hasn't happened yet but I would be surprised if Hodgson carries on at Palace next year.
Seen Howe, Lampard and Dyche all being linked with the job. Sadly all seem good candidates and not immediately obvious who is most likely to muck things up there.
The U21 job is a weird one, I can't see Lampard, Howe or Wilder taking it because I don't think it'll be good for their career progression.
I think it's best for someone in the England setup already to take it and not someone in the limelight, sort've like how Southgate has done a decent job after stepping up from being the U21 manager.
Unless either of those 3 really fancy themselves as the senior manager one day, this is probably the best way to get there.
The U21 job is a weird one, I can't see Lampard, Howe or Wilder taking it because I don't think it'll be good for their career progression.
I think it's best for someone in the England setup already to take it and not someone in the limelight, sort've like how Southgate has done a decent job after stepping up from being the U21 manager.
Unless either of those 3 really fancy themselves as the senior manager one day, this is probably the best way to get there.
It's a job which sounds prestigious, until you realise that you're one of FIVE age group managers. And that your best players will be in the full England team anyway
If anything the crucial person is the Steve Avory/Ged Roddy type, the person who has overall control over ALL the England youth sides, and (with Southgate) decides how they should play. Then pick decent coaches to take each level, who don't need to be household names, but must have a similar ethos.
League One strugglers Swindon Town have confirmed the departure of manager John Sheridan after five months in charge.
The 56-year-old had told BBC Radio Wiltshire he planned to resign after Saturday's 4-1 defeat by AFC Wimbledon.
That loss was Swindon's ninth in 11 games and leaves them seven points from safety with four matches to play.
"The club would like to thank John for his time in what must have been a difficult period for him personally," said a club statement.
"Assistant manager Tommy Wright will take charge of the team for the remainder of the season and will be assisted by academy head of coaching Lee Peacock."
League One strugglers Swindon Town have confirmed the departure of manager John Sheridan after five months in charge.
The 56-year-old had told BBC Radio Wiltshire he planned to resign after Saturday's 4-1 defeat by AFC Wimbledon.
That loss was Swindon's ninth in 11 games and leaves them seven points from safety with four matches to play.
"The club would like to thank John for his time in what must have been a difficult period for him personally," said a club statement.
"Assistant manager Tommy Wright will take charge of the team for the remainder of the season and will be assisted by academy head of coaching Lee Peacock."
Comments
I question if Howe and Lampard could do a good enough rebuild there, we saw with the former how he struggled @ Burnley
The rest of the names on that list reads like a catalogue of tossers
Cochrane is under 17s coach
Betsy is under 18s coach
Foster is under 19s coach
Lee Carsley is under 20s coach
I'm sure there never used to be so many separate international youth teams.
I think it's best for someone in the England setup already to take it and not someone in the limelight, sort've like how Southgate has done a decent job after stepping up from being the U21 manager.
Unless either of those 3 really fancy themselves as the senior manager one day, this is probably the best way to get there.
If anything the crucial person is the Steve Avory/Ged Roddy type, the person who has overall control over ALL the England youth sides, and (with Southgate) decides how they should play. Then pick decent coaches to take each level, who don't need to be household names, but must have a similar ethos.
Flick to leave Bayern at the end of the season
League One strugglers Swindon Town have confirmed the departure of manager John Sheridan after five months in charge.
The 56-year-old had told BBC Radio Wiltshire he planned to resign after Saturday's 4-1 defeat by AFC Wimbledon.
That loss was Swindon's ninth in 11 games and leaves them seven points from safety with four matches to play.
"The club would like to thank John for his time in what must have been a difficult period for him personally," said a club statement.
"Assistant manager Tommy Wright will take charge of the team for the remainder of the season and will be assisted by academy head of coaching Lee Peacock."
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/56792247
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/56832483
Average for his short tenure in Ireland, awful for Wigan & awful for Swindon.
I wonder if that is some kind of record?
Has agreed personal terms at least...
https://www.skysports.com/football/news/12040/12287658/julian-nagelsmann-bayern-munich-agree-terms-with-coach-but-rb-leipzig-demand-record-fee