Wouldn't say no - but I still think he will replace Ainsworth at QPR in the next couple of weeks
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Carsley the superficially obvious candidate. BBM would have to be considered.
But I think the Postecoglou, De Zerbi success justs shows little any of us knows about what's really available out there.
Lennon would be a terrible choice. None of the LOI guys are experienced enough or good enough. Bradley really frustrates me at Rovers despite the now likely 4 in a row. He regularly comes off second best in tactical battles. Goodwin or Kevin Doherty could be good candidates to replace him.
Genuinely worried the FAI will take a punt on Robbie Keane.
Yeah, exactly this for me.
It can still be fun to throw out names on a forum, mind. Unless they're all uninspiring ones like the names on here (no reflection on the posters putting them out there!)
I'd hope for a left-field appointment that turns out to be quite good, but I fear we're damaged goods such that we'll get tried, trusted, and slightly old.
Or Robbie Keane, of course, who may be keen to leave Tel Aviv.
If manager X has success at club level, that generally puts him out of our reach? And there is a need for a "name" to be appointed, making left field appointments difficult. Lots of snide comments about where Kenny's next job address is, very few go on to better things after the Ireland job.
Preferable to have a structure where we can promote from within, using the various underage positions as stepping stones to becoming the senior manager.
If it had to be someone from the betting list would say Chris Hughton is the best from a bad bunch. I wouldn't include Carsley cause I don't think he'll take a step backwards in his career unless full time senior management isn't his thing.
Surprised Chris Wilder hasn't been included in any betting lists. Unemployed and has had a couple of short stints at clubs since Sheffield United. An international gig might be something that suits him.
Ange was mentioned as an example of there's more out there when you look beyond the UK and Ireland so Kevin Muscat could be a name. Has won leagues in Australia and Japan. He joined a Belgian team after his stint at Melbourne but was sacked after six months. Ireland job might be an opportunity to put himself on display for clubs in the UK.
I like Carsley but he hasn't done anything as a senior manager.
I felt Kerr was judged by certain players for having done nothing in senior high-level management.
I also think Kenny probably doesn't command the respect that someone like Hughton, who has managed in Premier League, would.
It'll probably end up being Roy Keane.
Would Graham Potter be an utterly outlandish suggestion? Great at Brighton, but perhaps looking for something a bit different after the disaster at Chelsea, has worked outside England too.
[QUOTE=Fixer82;2165174]I like Carsley but he hasn't done anything as a senior manager.
I felt Kerr was judged by certain players for having done nothing in senior high-level management.
Think it totally different when a manager has had a successful playing career, playing at a high level both domestically and internationally, Kerr and Kenny would of been complete unknowns to some of the squad. Also Carsley won manager of the month in the championship while Brentford manager and was offered the job full time. Turned it down because he has a child with a disability so international management would seem to suit him better.
In terms of ability, not at all.
In terms of "Would he want it?" -
That from here (just a random Google). It reckons the lowest-paid Premier League manager is still on £1.5m per year.Quote:
Graham Potter is reportedly paid £10m at Chelsea, just ahead of Erik ten Hag (£9m) and Mikel Arteta (£8.3m).
Course there's only 20 jobs going in the Premier, but even so you'd have to imagine Potter would fancy his chances at getting another role before committing to such a large pay cut to join us.
Only chance of getting Graham Potter is if you've got a time machine to bring the year back to 2017/2018 when he was still managing in Sweden.
I don't know that the direct comparison of pay is that relevant. The international management job is a totally different beast, far less work. There must be managers who fancy stepping back from the grind, even temporarily.
I think the FAI needs someone who isn't usinmg the job as a shop window or short-term CV fix. Potter has the ability but he'd be off to a PL club in a heartbeat if he has any success with us.
Neil Warnock is available .....
Someone mentioned Kevin Muscat he was in the running for the Rangers job at one stage.
Perhaps someone managing in the Ukrainian leagues might prefer a bit of peace and calm. Darijo Srna is at Shakhtar or the legend Mircea Lucescu at Dynamo but he is 78 but previously managed Romania and Turkey.
Probably can't afford him but Paulo Fonseca of Lille and his style of football might suit us. Igor Tudor did ok with Marseille last season. Laurent Blanc is available as well.
Anyway I am throwing random names against the wall whilst the FAI wait to speed dial Neil Lennon and Steve Bruce !!!!
Possibly, though the list of current international managers across Europe doesn't have many ex-Premier League managers in it, or even high-profile managers outside the big countries.
You've a mix of the underage manager being promoted (I don't think Crawford is a serious candidate though?), a decent domestic manager stepping up (which is what we have now, and I don't think Bradley is a serious candidate), a big name manager (Deschamps, Martinez, Nagelsmann - but we can't afford that), and some left-field appointments (Willy Sagnol at Georgia for example)
You could argue Poyet is an exception to that - a former Premier League manager who may be within our budget - but in the 3½ years before taking over at Greece, his only work was six months in Chile.