PhilGull wrote:I was thinking of Rijkaard, van Basten & van Marwijk for Holland and Völler & Klinsmann for Germany. All of whom had success in one way or another although admittedly none of them seemed to last. Klinsmann though can take a lot of credit for changes he implemented being at the root of a lot of Germanys recent success.
Very true, however Rijkaard managed only Euro one semi-final, so did Terry Venables and Van Basten only ever made it to a round of 16 as Dutch manager, so not entirely sure that could be deemed as successful.
van Marwijk did, as I said make to the 2010 world cup final, but to repeat had the team available to do so. But the key thing here with most of the names you mentioned they ALL had massive experience of playing top level football around world and ALL had internationally experienced assistants and coaching staff.
So far the only two names to come up are Howe and Dyche, neither played in the premier league, or in Europe, neither have had coaching experience in Europe, both have no more than 2 years experience at managing in the premier league between them, it's 1 year each, if this is the best we have, we're in trouble.
On this I'd say we have two choices, stick with Roy or we have to go abroad again for an England manager as the problem as I've already covered lies deeper than that.
As a general point, to even begin to compare what's happened this season with Leicester City to international football is utter nonsense, it will turn out to be a one off remarkable achievement that will not be repeated for some time, since the birth of the premier league, we've seen 1 some times 2 of the top cash rich clubs have an off season, we've never seen all of them do it in the same season like this term, and I include Blackburn in that as they won the league off the back of Jack Walkers millions, team spirit and togetherness brought them through, but that will only work for short space of time, and will not cut the mustard at international level.
We have to go back to the point I made earlier, if an international manager happens to chance upon the best collection of footballers available in the world, like France, Holland, Spain and now Germany, you've got a chance of winning something.
Right now this is not England , what a manger do we think is going to turn us into a successful nation, any manager needs the players, what we should be doing is making sure our strategy for producing players and managers is right, and to make sure we give opportunities for our best players to play at the highest level, otherwise no manager will ever be able too fix our lack of success.