‘A couple of people have said to that to me’ hints Alan Shearer as he lifts lid on who could be next England manager

4 months ago 47

ALAN SHEARER admitted that he’s “heard” that Pep Guardiola could become the next England manager.

Guardiola’s contract at Manchester City expires next summer and there have been persistent rumours that the FA will try and woo him into the England role.

a man in a suit stands in front of a wall that says hall of fameGetty
Alan Shearer says he has heard England may be interested in appointing Pep Guardiola[/caption]
a man with a medal around his neck that says 2014 world cupAlamy
Guardiola has a year remaining on his City contract[/caption]

That talk intensified over the weekend after the FA opted to appoint Lee Carsley as interim manager rather than making a full-time appointment.

In a statement they said: “Lee Carsley has been appointed interim head coach of England senior men ahead of the start of the 2024-25 UEFA Nations League campaign.

“Carsley will step up from his role in charge of the Men’s U21s, initially for September’s fixtures away to Republic of Ireland and at home to Finland.

“But with a view to remaining in the position throughout autumn while the FA’s recruitment process for a new permanent head coach continues.”

Asked about becoming England manager as Manchester City beat neighbours Man Utd on penalties to win the Community Shield, Guardiola was coy and did not rule out the possibility.

The City boss admitted: “I have to decide what I want to do in my life.

“If I want to continue here, take a break, train national teams or not – many things.”

On The Rest is Football podcast, Shearer said: “There are a couple of people who have actually said that [Guardiola being on the FA’s wishlist] to me, but maybe that’s just rumour.”

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Harry Redknapp: Lampard or Gerrard should be next England manager

I’VE a message for all those who reckon the search for England’s next manager is a two-horse race — you’re bang on!

And while we’re at it, here’s another… I bet very few of you have narrowed it down to the same couple of candidates as me.

If the odds are spot-on, finding Gareth Southgate’s replacement is a toss-up between Eddie Howe and Graham Potter.

Well in my book it’s a straight head-to-head, too. But I’m even more convinced that the men I see as obvious front-runners will be lucky to even get an interview.

I doubt there are many who’d agree with me either, when I say the FA should look no further than Steven Gerrard or Frank Lampard for the next Three Lions boss.

Either of them could do the job standing on their head, yet probably neither will get so much as a phone call.

Mind you, plenty of people will insist there’s no reason why they should because they’ve already written off both as failures.

Forgetting that Frank reached an FA Cup final and finished fourth in his first spell at Chelsea.

Or the fact that Everton were in such a mess, he never had a prayer when he went there.

There’s every chance they’ll gloss over Stevie’s time at Rangers, despite their first title win in a decade — unbeaten as well — and say he was a flop at Aston Villa.

But you show me a manager who’s not had a tough time of it somewhere down the line. Potter certainly did at Chelsea — he only lasted 31 games and lost 11 of them.

So did Unai Emery, the man who replaced Stevie as boss at Villa, when he was Arsenal manager. It happens to everyone out there.

So what’s the difference between Potter and Frank?

Why is one an obvious candidate for England, yet the other not even worthy of a mention?

Nothing against Eddie or Graham, by the way. Eddie’s doing well enough at Newcastle without absolutely tearing it up.

And Potter did a good job at Brighton before Chelsea but he had good recruitment and was working with good players.

Look at some of the names he had and where they ended up.

Alexis Mac Allister won the World Cup and went to Liverpool. Leandro Trossard is at Arsenal, Marc Cucurella and Moises Caicedo joined Chelsea, Yves Bissouma is with Tottenham.

There’s no doubt Potter or Howe would be a safe pair of hands. A steady Eddie. Just like Gareth was eight years ago — which is why they will probably get a chance.

But if the FA want someone steeped in football knowledge — at international level too — and who knows the game inside out at that level, both Frank and Stevie leave them standing.

The players would love it as well. They’d be desperate to play for them.

They would have nothing but respect whether it was Lampard or Gerrard as boss.

So, are they both on the scrapheap for good because they’ve had a failure somewhere down the line? There won’t be any managers left before long if that’s all it takes.

And here’s another thing as well. While you need a thick skin to be a club manager, it’s not a patch on the one demanded at international level.

That goes for players — certainly the senior ones — as well. And Stevie and Frank could tell you all about that better than most.

Some of the stuff Frank had to put up with back in the day was horrendous, horrible stuff.

It was the same for Gerro, especially when he was captain.

But the pair of them stood up and came through it. And that’s the sort of character you want and need as England manager.

It’s not about being a fantastic coach. When do you really get the chance to prove that with England? You don’t.

You’re not out there every day doing shape, shadow play and the like. For one thing you tend to pick the team at the last minute because you don’t want it leaking out!

It’s about managing, not coaching and there is a difference. It’s about picking the best players in the right positions.

It’s about attacking and being positive — and in my book, nothing would be more positive than giving Stevie or Frank a call.

But I’d be very surprised if anyone at the FA even picks up the phone and dials their numbers.

He then added: “You never know…”

Co-host Gary Lineker asked if it was important for the next manager to be English to which co-host Micah Richards responded: “If Pep was to go to England and win the World Cup, no one would care [that he isn’t English].”

Lineker then responded: “The difference with someone like Pep or [Jurgen] Klopp or [Carlo] Ancelotti is that they’ve had experience in English football… so we can pretend they’re English.”

It’s understood the FA want to interview a wide range of candidates before making a call on Gareth Southgate‘s successor, a move which Shearer said: “I think it’s a wise decision to give it to Lee Carsley and just take their time and see what happens.

“It would have been really difficult to appoint someone in that short amount of time, so this gives them time to sit back and look at the bigger picture.”

Aside from GuardiolaEddie Howe, Graham Potter and Mauricio Pochettino have all been tipped as frontrunners for the job.

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