Gareth Southgate knows his job as England manager is on the line. Despite the apparent security of a contract that runs until the end of 2024 and a track record of reaching the 2018 World Cup semifinal and Euro 2020 final, a run of five games without a win and relegation from the top tier of the Nations League has raised the prospect of Qatar 2022 being the end of the road for the 52-year-old.
“Contracts are irrelevant in football because managers can have three, four, five year contracts and you accept that, if results are not good enough, it is time to go your separate ways,” Southgate said ahead of Monday’s meeting with Germany at Wembley. “Why would I be any different? I am not arrogant enough to think that my contract is going to protect me in any way.”
Time and perspective will ultimately serve Southgate well when it comes to assessing his time as England manager. He has made the country a world power again by developing a team capable of performing at major tournaments and, having taken charge in the wake of the Euro 2016 humiliation against Iceland and Sam Allardyce’s one-game reign as manager, it shouldn’t be forgotten just how negative a situation he walked into.
But right now, Southgate is in the eye of a storm caused by bad results that have prompted supporters to boo him and his team during and after successive defeats against Hungary and Italy. His credentials are now being questioned — too cautious; lacks top-level tactical ability — and the race to identify his likely successor has already started.
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And this is where the English Football Association (FA) has a major problem. If Southgate leaves his job after Qatar — he may yet decide to go of his own accord before being asked to clear his desk — the list of potential replacements is desperately short and lacking in convincing candidates.
It was the same story in 2016, when Allardyce — appointed as Roy Hodgson’s replacement — was fired after just one game in charge following an undercover newspaper sting, but on that occasion the FA had Southgate within its coaching system to act as a safe pair of hands in a caretaker role before eventually appointing him on a full-time basis.
There is no Southgate within the FA system now and with Graham Potter leaving Brighton for Chelsea earlier this month, the outstanding English candidate no longer seems to be available.
Southgate’s successor doesn’t have to be English, of course, but the FA has made it clear on many previous occasions that, having invested so much time and money into developing homegrown coaches, it is now committed to ensuring that the senior men’s team is managed by an Englishman.
So if that remains the case, whenever Southgate’s time comes to an end, the list of candidates becomes extremely short very quickly.