English coaches 'capable' of managing national team, says Southampton boss
Southampton boss Russell Martin said Thursday that
"loads of English coaches are capable" of coaching England after
Thomas Tuchel was named as the national team's new manager.
The German, a former Chelsea and Bayern Munich boss,
was unveiled on Wednesday and will start his new job on January 1.
The 51-year-old succeeds Gareth Southgate as
permanent coach and becomes the third foreign England manager after Sven-Goran
Eriksson and Fabio Capello.
Football Association chief executive Mark Bullingham
said English coaches were interviewed, but England were "not in that
place" to have several homegrown contenders for the national team job.
Former Manchester United captain and England
defender Gary Neville admitted on Sky Sports that Tuchel was the "best
available manager in the world".
But he added: "We are damaging ourselves
accepting Tuchel is better than any of the other English coaches. We are in a
rut when it comes to English coaching."
Neville's former United and England team-mate Wayne
Rooney, now in charge of second-tier Plymouth, was taken aback by the Tuchel
move.
"He's a very good coach but I'm surprised the
FA have employed him," said Rooney, who won 120 caps and scored 53 goals
for England.
"What the FA have built has been a great
platform for young coaches coming through, so I'm surprised they haven't gone
with one of their own.
"But, as I said, they have made the decision
and I wish him all the best and I hope he does well for us."
Southampton boss Martin, whose team were promoted to
the Premier League in May, described Tuchel as a "brilliant" manager
but said there were few opportunities for homegrown coaches.
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'Not given enough credit' -
"There are loads of English coaches really
capable of doing the job as well," said former Scotland international
Martin ahead of his team's Premier League match against Leicester on Saturday.
"English managers -- really difficult to get
the opportunity to manage in the Premier League unless you take a team there a
lot of the time.
"Maybe English managers are not given enough
credit or maybe they're deemed not good enough by the most important people.
"I hope at some point it will be really obvious
that there are lots of really good English managers around that are capable of
doing it."
Leicester boss Steve Cooper said he believed in the
British coaching pathway.
"Hopefully over the course of time British
coaching will continue to improve and we will be right up there with the
world's best," said the Welshman, who led England to victory at the
Under-17 World Cup in 2017.
"In the meantime any opportunity we are given
we have to take them and do a good job. Until we do that on a regular basis
maybe we shouldn't say so much."
Everton manager Sean Dyche said many people would
have liked an English coach but believes Tuchel's appointment is "a
reality of the modern game".
"Each pathway doesn't always lead to where you
want it to. In theory, the idea was to get English coaches, fast-track certain
members if needs be, get them through the system, create that platform for
coaches going into the system, and therefore managing the country.
"But it's changed so much, football management,
and the view of it. Now they've obviously looked at it differently."
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