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Sam Allardyce leaves England manager job after one game in charge | Sam Allardyce leaves England manager job after one game in charge |
(about 1 hour later) | |
He had said it was his “dream job” and insisted he could succeed where so many others had failed in making England again a force in world football. | |
But just 67 days after he was appointed in the wake of the national side’s Euro 2016 humiliation, Sam Allardyce has lost his job as England manager in the wake of an undercover newspaper investigation. | |
The former Bolton Wanderers and West Ham manager will leave with a 100% record following an unconvincing 1-0 victory over Slovakia in his only international match in charge but do so hugely embarrassed and humiliated. | |
Allardyce’s future was thrown into doubt on Monday night when the Telegraph published the results of an undercover investigation that showed him negotiating a fee of £400,000 to represent an overseas firm that was hoping to profit from Premier League transfers, before he had even named his first squad. | |
A dramatic day began with FA chief executive Martin Glenn and newly appointed chairman Greg Clarke arriving at Wembley for a series of crisis meetings, as Allardyce set off from his Bolton home for Wembley. | |
It ended with news filtering out to the media crews huddled outside that a “deeply disappointed” Allardyce had agreed to quit by “mutual consent”. He will be replaced for the next four matches against Malta, Slovenia, Scotland and Spain by under-21 manager Gareth Southgate. | |
Alongside a general impression of greed that will not have played well with an FA workforce that has recently undergone its own round of redundancies or fans asked to fill Wembley, there were specific issues in the taped conversations that the FA felt it could not ignore. | |
Allardyce also offered advice on how to “get around” the FA’s own regulations on third party ownership, was disparaging about his predecessor Roy Hodgson’s speech impediment, said that assistant Gary Neville should “sit down and shut up” and criticised the amount the FA’s “stupid” Wembley redevelopment. | |
While some of those remarks could have been explained away as embarrassing indiscretions, the advice on circumventing the FA’s own transfer regulations was particularly problematic ahead of a week in which it may be forced to announce investigations into other elements of the Telegraph’s investigation. | |
“Allardyce’s conduct, as reported today, was inappropriate of the England manager. He accepts he made a significant error of judgement and has apologised,” said the FA in a statement. | |
“However, due to the serious nature of his actions, The FA and Allardyce have mutually agreed to terminate his contract with immediate effect.” | |
“This is not a decision that was taken lightly but The FA’s priority is to protect the wider interests of the game and maintain the highest standards of conduct in football,” it added. | |
“The manager of the England men’s senior team is a position which must demonstrate strong leadership and show respect for the integrity of the game at all times.” | |
Allardyce said he was “deeply disappointed” after offering a “sincere and wholehearted apology” for his actions. Although it was made clear during the recorded conversations that any proposed arrangements would need the FA’s full approval, I recognise I made some comments which have caused embarrassment,” said Allardyce. | |
“As part of today’s meeting, I was asked to clarify what I said and the context in which the conversations took place. I have co-operated fully in this regard.” | |
If the manner of Allardyce’s “mutually agreed” exit - a day of fevered speculation that ended in a departure that felt increasingly inevitable - did not feel unusual in taking its place among a string of similarly premature and controversial departures for some of his predecessors, then the length of his reign certainly was. | |
The 61-year-old said in July he was “extremely honoured” and promised to return the feelgood factor to an England set up left demoralised and at rock bottom by a Euro 2016 defeat to Iceland that led to the departure of Hodgson. | |
Handed a £3m a year contract, plus bonuses, he said he had fulfilled his lifetime’s ambition by taking over as England manager. But he now leaves with the unwanted record of the shortest ever managerial reign for a permanent appointee. | |
The FA said in July it had turned to Allardyce following a “comprehensive and structured” process led by Glenn but also including vice chairman David Gill and technical director Dan Ashworth. | |
Clarke, the former Football League chairman who took the same role at the FA in August, had not been involved in the decision to appoint Allardyce and was believed to take a particularly dim view of the revelations. | |
Southgate will now take charge for the qualifier against Malta on October 8, with English football racked by a cocktail of embarrassment and discord to add to the familiar round of soul searching that accompanied their summer failure. | |
If Southgate impresses he could take the job on a permanent basis, with the FA keen to develop more of a co-ordinated approach across its teams. | |
Among the other favourites to get the job are Crystal Palace manager Alan Pardew, former Hull City manager Steve Bruce and Bournemouth’s Eddie Howe. |