I'm not calling for Capello to be sacked - it would be too expensive to get rid of him but I do think we should look at the salaries we pay coaches.
Here's a list of WC coaches' salaries (well, the top 20) and, as can be seen, there's no correlation between earnings and success; just three of the top 10 have got their teams to the quarter finals. The discrepancy is astonishing: I'm willing to bet there's no league in the world where the top paid manager gets more than 15 times the basic salary of the lowest-paid.
- Fabio Capello (England): 9,900,000 USD/year
- Marcelo Lippi (Italy): 4,100,000
- Javier Aguirre (Mexico): 4,000,000
- Joachim Löw (Germany): 3,300,000
- Berter van Marwijk (Netherlands): 2,700,000
- Ottmar Hitzfeld (Switzerland): 2,600,000
- Vicente del Bosque (Spain): 2,200,000
- Carlos Queiroz (Portugal): 2,000,000
- Pim Verbeek (Australia): 1,820,000
- Carlos Parreira (South Africa): 1,800,000
- Dunga (Brazil): 1,250,000
- Diego Maradona (Argentina): 1,200,000
- Takeshi Okada (Japan): 1,200,000
- Ricki Herbert (New Zealand): 1,200,000
- Otto Rehhagel (Greece): 1,150,000
- Paul Le Guen (Cameroon): 960,000
- Marcelo Bielsa (Chile): 850,000
- Vahdi Halilhodzic (Cote d’Ivoire): 740,000
- Raymond Domenech (France): 720,000
- Hun Jung Moo (South Korea): 600,000
I think that the FA should take a firm stand on the next coach. IMO what they should do is look at the salary of the coach one or two places above England in the FIFA rankings and offer that. For example, if England fell four places after the WC, being just behind the US, say, then he'd get the same salary as Bob Bradley (currently $400,000). That way the FA could say that they're paying above the market rate
Of course, we're not going to attract big name coaches looking for a big payout but we'll be able to see if the likes of Harry "I'm English and I'd jump at the chance of managing the national side" Redknapp are serious or not.
Here's a list of WC coaches' salaries (well, the top 20) and, as can be seen, there's no correlation between earnings and success; just three of the top 10 have got their teams to the quarter finals. The discrepancy is astonishing: I'm willing to bet there's no league in the world where the top paid manager gets more than 15 times the basic salary of the lowest-paid.
- Fabio Capello (England): 9,900,000 USD/year
- Marcelo Lippi (Italy): 4,100,000
- Javier Aguirre (Mexico): 4,000,000
- Joachim Löw (Germany): 3,300,000
- Berter van Marwijk (Netherlands): 2,700,000
- Ottmar Hitzfeld (Switzerland): 2,600,000
- Vicente del Bosque (Spain): 2,200,000
- Carlos Queiroz (Portugal): 2,000,000
- Pim Verbeek (Australia): 1,820,000
- Carlos Parreira (South Africa): 1,800,000
- Dunga (Brazil): 1,250,000
- Diego Maradona (Argentina): 1,200,000
- Takeshi Okada (Japan): 1,200,000
- Ricki Herbert (New Zealand): 1,200,000
- Otto Rehhagel (Greece): 1,150,000
- Paul Le Guen (Cameroon): 960,000
- Marcelo Bielsa (Chile): 850,000
- Vahdi Halilhodzic (Cote d’Ivoire): 740,000
- Raymond Domenech (France): 720,000
- Hun Jung Moo (South Korea): 600,000
I think that the FA should take a firm stand on the next coach. IMO what they should do is look at the salary of the coach one or two places above England in the FIFA rankings and offer that. For example, if England fell four places after the WC, being just behind the US, say, then he'd get the same salary as Bob Bradley (currently $400,000). That way the FA could say that they're paying above the market rate
Of course, we're not going to attract big name coaches looking for a big payout but we'll be able to see if the likes of Harry "I'm English and I'd jump at the chance of managing the national side" Redknapp are serious or not.