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As Brian Barwick, the Football Association chief executive, went through the motions of backing Steve McClaren yesterday, others at Soho Square conceded it is unlikely to be long before the search for his successor starts in earnest. José Mourinho would be a hugely popular choice, while Randy Lerner, the Aston Villa owner, offered his support to Martin O’Neill’s candidacy by saying that he would not stand in his manager’s way if he was offered the job.
The availability of ageing but serial winners such as Fabio Capello and Marcello Lippi has not gone unnoticed, while the FA will also investigate whether Jürgen Klinsmann would consider following his successful work with Germany by taking a job with their longstanding rivals.
Sources close to Mourinho said he is not interested in managing England, despite there being nothing in his severance agreement with Chelsea to prevent it, instructing friends to spread the word that his next job will be in club football. But there will be a clamour for the Portuguese to take over if McClaren is dismissed and it remains to be seen whether public opinion can change his mind.
Mourinho is enjoying his sabbatical, spending time with his family and studying at a university near his home town of Setúbal, but hopes to return to a big European club before the end of the season. He has said repeatedly that the only international team he wants to manage is Portugal, and that towards the end of his career.
Vultures circle over McClaren’s regime
Klinsmann’s intentions are less clear, although he is keen to get back to work. The former Tottenham Hotspur striker, who watched England’s defeat in Moscow on pay-per-view at his California home, is an Anglophile but his progressive methods and desire for complete control may be too much for traditionalists. O’Neill is similarly strong-minded and has not let the disappointment of being rejected last year diminish his ambitions. He would welcome another opportunity to show what he can do.
Lerner as good as revealed that his manager wants the job by indicating that he would be willing to release him from his 12-month rolling contract. “It’s clearly one of the great honours you can achieve in management, anywhere, any time,” he said. “I would not stand in his way, but my God, I hope he’s here for the long term.”
The endorsement of McClaren from Barwick was far more half-hearted. “Steve’s job is to prepare the players for [matches against] Austria and Croatia,” he said. “You wouldn’t expect me to say anything else and he has my support.” The head coach himself said he was “not even thinking about resigning, I’m really not. It’s not crossing my mind whatsoever. There’s still hope and it’s not the end.”
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