Cooper âbelieves in Britainâs coaching pathwayâ
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Leicester City manager Steve Cooper says he believes in Britainâs culture and coaching pathway following Thomas Tuchelâs appointment as England head coach.
German Tuchel, 51, was confirmed as the next Three Lions boss on Wednesday and will become only the third non-British manager of the England menâs team when he starts in the role on 1 January.
English candidates were among âapproximately 10â people interviewed for the job, says the Football Association, but former England defender Gary Neville called the decision âdamagingâ for homegrown coaches.
âHopefully over the course of time British coaching will continue to improve and we will be right up there with the worldâs best,â said Welshman Cooper, who led England to victory at the Under-17 World Cup in 2017.
âIn the meantime any opportunity we are given we have to take them and do a good job. Until we do that on a regular basis maybe we shouldnât say so much.
âI really believe in British culture, I believe in the coaching education pathway as well.â
FA chief executive Mark Bullingham said on Wednesday England are ânot in that placeâ to have several homegrown managers in contention for the national team job but insisted the national coaching system is a success.
âI think any federation in the world that is looking to hire a senior manager, clearly you would love to have five to 10 domestic candidates who are coaching clubs in your domestic league, challenging and winning honours in your domestic league and European football,â said Bullingham.
âWe are not quite in that place at the moment.â
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Published17 hours ago
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Former Chelsea manager Tuchel replaces Gareth Southgate, who resigned after eight years in charge following Englandâs Euro 2024 final defeat by Spain in July.
Like Southgate, interim manager Lee Carsley has progressed through the FAâs coaching development system at St Georgeâs Park â but he will return to lead the England Under-21s after overseeing Novemberâs Nations League fixtures.
Tuchelâs assistant is Englishman Anthony Barry, with whom he has worked at Chelsea and Bayern Munich
âOur pathway is really strong, both from a coaches and playersâ point of view. There are a lot of fantastic young coaches around and obviously Anthony is one of those,â Bullingham said.
âWe have got to keep helping our young coaches to get the best opportunities they can and to get them good opportunities at clubs. We would love to have more English coaches managing in the Premier League, for example.â
The FA said it was looking for a coach with âa strong track record delivering results in the Premier League and/or leading international competitionsâ following Southgateâs resignation.
Former Manchester United captain Neville, speaking on Sky Sports, agreed Tuchel fit that criteria and said England had âprobably got the best available coach in the worldâ.
However, Neville added: âI am not sure it meets the criteria of St Georgeâs Park and the belief in English coaches and the growth in the English teamsâ performances over the last few years.
âI think there are serious questions for the FA to answer in respect of English coaching. I do think we are damaging ourselves accepting Tuchel is better than any of the other English coaches.â
Former England and Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher said: âIâm not the most patriotic of people, [and feel] the England manager has to be this or that.
âItâs not about England. Itâs international football. The whole point of it, certainly with the major nations who compete for titles, is itâs our best versus their best.â