Skip to content

FA chief hints at Southgate as possible interim England manager

Carl Recine / Reuters

CHANTILLY - FA chief executive Martin Glenn hinted on Tuesday that Gareth Southgate could become interim England manager and suggested a female coach could succeed Roy Hodgson on a permanent basis.

The FA is looking for a new England manager after Hodgson, 68, announced his resignation following Monday's humiliating elimination by Iceland at Euro 2016.

Glenn hopes to have appointed a successor by the start of England's 2018 World Cup qualifying campaign in early September, but said that if not, "we have an interim plan in mind."

Asked if he was speaking about England Under-21 coach Southgate, the British bookmakers' favourite to succeed Hodgson, he said: "We are not talking about names today, but it would be a pretty obvious one to pick."

Related: 5 frontrunners to succeed Hodgson at England

Glenn revealed that he, FA technical director Dan Ashworth and FA vice-chairman David Gill, the former Manchester United director, will lead the search for Hodgson's replacement.

"We clearly need an inspirational manager who can harness the big resources that the English game has got, everything we have now got at St George's Park (the national training centre), to make us more resilient in tournaments," Glenn said.

Raising the possibility of a first female England coach, he added: "As I said, it has got to be the best man or woman for the job.

"More likely a man, but it's the best person for the job. I don't think we are ruling out anything."

Related: FA open to foreign manager as Hodgson's successor

Daily Newsletter

Get the latest trending sports news daily in your inbox