English not delighted over Hodgson choice
Reuters - Monday 30 April 2012, 07:51
The Football Association's decision to
hold talks with Roy Hodgson about the vacant England manager's
job has left fans and players shocked, and the West
Bromwich Albion coach keenly aware that he would have to win
over a sceptical public should he take the role.
Despite winning 13 trophies on his travels through largely
unfashionable clubs in Europe, the 64-year-old former Inter
Milan and Liverpool boss has already been deemed 'Mr Average' by
sections of the hard-to-please English media.
When Fabio Capello left the England job in February,
Tottenham Hotspur's manager Harry Redknapp seemed the only
candidate, with former captain David Beckham heading a long,
credible list calling for his appointment.
Monday's edition of The Sun, England's biggest selling
newspaper, asked "Why didn't Harry get it?" and claimed eight
out of 10 fans in their poll said Hodgson was the wrong choice.
"With the greatest respect, there's not going to be a great
wave of excitement about the appointment of Roy," the paper
quoted Mark Perryman of the England Supporters Club as saying.
While Perryman went on to praise Hodgson's credentials, the
overwhelming feeling remained that he is second choice to
Redknapp.
"Surely Roy Hodgson can't be the only name on the 'list'?"
former England international and Everton captain Phil Neville
tweeted after the FA said they had only spoken to Hodgson.
The overwhelming support for Redknapp when Capello exited in
the wake of the row over John Terry and the captaincy, had led
most to believe it was a foregone conclusion that the Spurs
manager would get the job he wanted.
CHEAPER OPTION
Credited with being a strong man-manager who would be able
to get the best out of a side that had failed to reach the
semi-finals of a major tournament since Euro 96, Redknapp's
strengths appeared to outweigh the sceptics' concerns that he
had won only one major title in his 30-year career.
"Harry is an excellent man-manager and I believe that
Hodgson is second choice, whatever the FA says," former
Liverpool defender Mark Lawrenson told the BBC.
The last obstacle had appeared to be hurdled in February
when Redknapp was cleared of tax evasion, but his admission
during the hearing that he is "the most disorganised person in
the world" and that he writes "like a two-year-old and can't
spell" may have been his undoing with FA bosses.
Hodgson speaks numerous languages and is considered an
astute tactician. Considered too defensive by Liverpool fans,
his success at Fulham and now at West Brom have come by building
from the back and counter-attacking.
His contract with West Brom, who sit 10th in the Premier
League with two games remaining, is up at the end of the season
and appointing him as England manager would be a much cheaper
option than buying Redknapp out of his Spurs contract.
Titles in Sweden, Denmark and taking Switzerland to the 1994
World Cup - and a best ever world ranking of third - outweigh
anything Redknapp has achieved but, with few English players and
managers plying their trade outside of their borders, Hodgson's
past glories are often overlooked.
Couple that with an 18-month spell in charge of Blackburn
Rovers, where he was sacked at the foot of the table just three
years after Blackburn were crowned Premier League champions; and
a poor six months in charge of Liverpool, and the pessimism
becomes perhaps more understandable.
At Liverpool, Hodgson was appointed despite the fans'
clamouring for club legend Kenny Dalglish. Six months later,
Dalglish had replaced Hodgson and has been afforded far more
time with fans despite an equally difficult league campaign and
greater investment in the side.
Should Hodgson be appointed England manager and the team
struggles at Euro 2012 in June and July, the FA could find
themselves being forced into a very similar situation.