English Managers Excel on the World Stage: A New Era of Leadership

 



There aren't many outgoing Pakistan managers who would fancy themselves as England boss in their next job. But then Stephen Constantine is no ordinary national team coach.

The 62-year-old Englishman has been taking charge of international sides for more than 25 years and with six different countries on his CV, no compatriot – past or present – has ever managed more.

It's an odyssey Constantine started in 1999 when he received a surprise job offer to manage Nepal's national team while coaching in the USA. India came calling three years later after the former Millwall trialist had led the Gokhalis to the South Asian Games final.

It kick-started a globe-trotting career that has seen him take charge of Malawi, Sudan, Rwanda, several club sides and India again, before his most recent post with Pakistan in 2023.

So with all of the talk about a paucity of homegrown coaches with the right experience to take the England manager's job after German Thomas Tuchel's appointment, Constantine is keen to point out his credentials as an international specialist.

"[I could be England manager] standing on my head. Why wouldn't I?" says Constantine, who stepped down as Pakistan manager in November. "But they're not going to give me the England job because I'm not a name.

"I wouldn't even blink, where do I start? That's not me being arrogant, that's me thinking, 'I'm not going to teach them (England's players) how to play football, I don't need to', I'd have to help them manage the game and help get the best out of them."

Constantine realises he won't have registered on the Football Association's radar when they picked Tuchel to be Gareth Southgate's successor back in October. In fact, he's happy to concede many of the committee who appointed the former Borussia Dortmund, Paris St-Germain, Chelsea and Bayern Munich boss won't even have heard of him

Although it's rare for an Englishman to manage the most successful men's national sides abroad, things are different when it comes to the women's game.


Emma Hayes has one of the most coveted jobs in world football, managing the United States national team, while former Wales boss Gemma Grainger, born in Middlesbrough, was appointed Norway boss in January 2024.


The experienced Constantine, though, is not alone among Englishmen currently plying their trade around the world.


They are led by ex-England boss Steve McClaren at Jamaica and New Zealand's Darren Bazeley, who had 10 years as a player with Watford, in more high-profile posts. There is also former Bradford City and Sheffield Wednesday defender Ashley Westwood at Hong Kong, and Southampton-born Gary White in a second spell at Chinese Taipei, having worked previously with the Bahamas.


Scan the list of current national team bosses and there are very few nationalities represented more than England. Only Spain, France, Germany and Argentina are in the same bracket, suggesting English managers are some of the most coveted in international football.


Constantine, though, claims those numbers are intrinsically linked to how well a country's national team does in major tournaments.


"Do you know why I want England to win the World Cup or the Euros? Because then every country is going to go, 'we have to get somebody from England'," says Constantine.


"Why? Because if a country has just won the Euros or the World Cup, it makes a big difference all over the world."

English-born international managers in charge of men's national teams, as of last international match:


Gary White – Chinese Taipei


Ashley Westwood – Hong Kong


Mikele Leigertwood – Antigua and Barbuda


Chris Kiwomya – British Virgin Islands


Ricky Hill - Turks and Caicos Islands


Steve McClaren – Jamaica


Lee Bowyer – Montserrat


Charlie Trout – Puerto Rico


Darren Bazeley – New Zealand


English-born international managers in charge of men's national teams who left roles earlier in 2024:


Gareth Southgate – England


Lee Carsley – England


Stephen Constantine – Pakistan


Warren Moon – Papua New Guinea


Emmerson Boyce – Barbados


Terry Connor - Grenada

A busy contacts book clearly translates to job opportunities. When McClaren swapped a role as Erik ten Hag's assistant manager at Manchester United for the Jamaica national team last summer - having grown a successful reputation in the same position at Old Trafford under Sir Alex Ferguson - he spoke about being attracted to the job after previously working with the Jamaican FA while at Fifa.


It works further down the rankings too, with Hong Kong gaffer Westwood starting on his path to an international career - which included a short spell at Afghanistan - after links from his time working as a coach at Blackburn Rovers opened doors for him in India. It's a far cry from his first managerial post with Kettering Town in 2012.


"After Kettering, I took up assistant roles under Michael Appleton at Portsmouth, Blackpool and Blackburn, who were owned by [Indian owners] the Venkys," recalls Westwood, 48.


"My name was associated with the Venkys and somebody involved with them was on the board at Bengaluru FC and my name got thrown in the mix. Appleton wanted to take a year out of football but at my age, I needed to carry on climbing the ladder and learning, so I took it.


"Coaching abroad was never on my horizon but you can never plan what's next in football. After three successful years in India, I went to Malaysia, back to India and then on to [national team jobs with] Afghanistan and now Hong Kong."

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