Gary Neville: Gareth Southgate's successor as England boss should be English
Sky Sports' Gary Neville: "There are obvious contenders. Graham Potter and Eddie Howe will get mentioned and I think it will definitely be an English manager. Moving to St George's Park was to promote and develop English coaches. To take that away from an English manager would be wrong"
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Sky Sports' Gary Neville expects the FA to name an English successor to Gareth Southgate and says it will be important to continue the development of young English players
Sky Sports' Gary Neville explains why the FA should name an English successor to Gareth Southgate as England boss.
Neville, speaking on Sky Sports News, was full of praise for Southgate's eight years in charge of the Three Lions, which included a run to the World Cup semi-finals in 2018 and back-to-back Euros finals in 2020 and 2024, and believes an English manager should be appointed to build on the work done by Southgate.
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He has had an amazing time for eight years, surpassed the expectation of every England fan and deserved to call time on his own terms.
He has achieved incredible things on the pitch and also off the pitch. He has managed the politics, the club vs country rivalry. He has removed those barriers, but it has taken its toll.
'Southgate will be a tough act to follow'
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Sky Sports senior reporter Rob Dorsett takes a look at the possible names in the frame to replace Southgate as England manager
He has got honesty, he has got integrity, he is a fantastic person.
When he took the job, he was toying with whether to take it or not and it was an unspectacular appointment, but he is the manager with the most amount of tournament experience ever - Euro 96, the U21s.
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He has learnt a lot from the past and I know those learnings will be left behind. He won't take the crown jewels, he is not that sort of person.
He will be a tough act to follow.
'What he's done with England is remarkable'
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Take a look back at the story of Southgate's time in charge as England manager
We couldn't go over the edge [and win a tournament] but that is nothing to be ashamed of.
He will get the respect, even more so if England don't qualify for tournaments or get knocked out in the group stages. We will be back there at some point in the future.
In terms of sustained success, what England have done under Southgate is remarkable. The players deserve credit as well.
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Sky Sports senior reporter Rob Dorsett takes a closer look at the possible reasons behind Gareth Southgate's decision to step down as England manager
Gareth was spinning plates in this tournament more than in others. There were signs players were getting caught in the weeds and taking criticism.
I wouldn't say there were fractures - you can't get to a final with fractures - but you could smell it and see in Gareth's face and players' faces things weren't quite right that were right in the past.
That might have contributed [to his departure].
What will Southgate's legacy be?
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Former England forward Alan Smith says Southgate brought enjoyment and took the fear out of players performing in the national side
Gareth is right at the very top, apart from Sir Alf Ramsey who won the World Cup. If Gareth had won on Sunday, he would have been right up there with him. That is the one thing that will live with Gareth.
He has created one of the most successful periods in English football history.
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I know players are developed by clubs and academies and they should take credit, but you only get the respect you deserve as a nation when those players get to international football and start reaching semi-finals and finals.
I think English footballers are respected more around the world because of Gareth Southgate.
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I would like to think Gareth will stay in international management. His patience and understanding is second to none and it suits him.
He is a statesman-like leader who represents countries really well.
He is such a proud Englishman - he doesn't look like a bulldog type who will fight for his country, like Terry Butcher and Stuart Pearce, but he is that type in a different shell.
But I think he could take his learnings into another country.
He could also stay with England and the FA in a higher role and develop English coaches.
'Next manager should be English'
[The next manager] will have to win a trophy to surpass what Gareth has achieved.
Over the years we have had every type of manager - the fashionable, the international manager, best English managers, people who have come through the ranks with youth teams.
There is no science in terms of what works and there are obvious contenders. Graham Potter and Eddie Howe will get mentioned and I think it will definitely be an English manager.
Moving to St George's Park was to promote and develop English coaches. To take that away from an English manager and give to an international manager would be wrong.
Is Klopp an option for England?
Gary Neville on why England's coach should be English:
"You can't dismiss Jurgen Klopp, Pep Guardiola, sensational managers like that but if we don't develop our own managers...
"English coaching has a long way to go to catch up with the other great nations and we have to work hard and put them in the biggest environments and toughest matches.
"Give them an opportunity."
The highs and lows of Southgate's tenure
September 2016 - Appointed England manager
July 2018 - England reach the World Cup semi-finals for the first time in 28 years but lose 2-1 to Croatia
June 2019 - England reach the semi-finals of the inaugural Nations League but lose 3-1 to Netherlands
July 2021 - England reach the final of the Euros for the first time but lose to Italy on penalties after a 1-1 draw
September 2022 - England are relegated from the top tier of the Nations League after failing to win any of their six matches
December 2022 - England are knocked out of the World Cup by France in the quarter-finals
July 2024 - England reach the Euro 2024 final with dramatic knockout wins over Slovakia, Switzerland and the Netherlands - but lose to Spain in Berlin.