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Wenger feels 'sad' for Capello

Thursday 9th February 2012 17:33

Wenger: Believes Englishman should take role

Wenger: Believes Englishman should take role

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Arsene Wenger has defended Fabio Capello's stance over John Terry but reiterated his belief that an Englishman should manage the national team.

Capello resigned on Wednesday after the Football Association board went over his head to strip Terry of the captaincy, with the player facing trial on a racist abuse charge in July, after Euro 2012. Terry denies a charge of racially abusing QPR defender Anton Ferdinand.

Capello made clear in an interview with Italian television on Sunday that he completely disagreed with the FA's decision, and told Arsenal Player today: "When the decision came out from the FA, I said that the choice of captain is down to the manager. You (the manager) pick your team, you choose your captain.

"I did not expect such an extreme situation but it looks like there was already some turbulence there and that was just the final straw. I am sad that Capello leaves four months before such an important competition, it is a big blow for England and I am sad for him."

Wenger is considered an outside bet with bookmakers to replace Capello, with Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp the overwhelming favourite.

The Frenchman believes the FA should look for an English candidate, adding: "I have always been straight in (suggesting an Englishman should be next) - not because I think an English manager can do a better job than any foreign guy, just because you represent your country and it is better if the manager is from there. Especially in a big football country like England.

"It's now down to the FA to make the right decision and you will not be surprised when I tell you I do not want to interfere with that!"

England defender Rio Ferdinand aimed a parting shot at Capello, and identified Redknapp as the best man to replace him.

Ferdinand, who has already ruled himself out of the running to succeed Terry as captain, wrote on Twitter that the national team "don't need anything else lost in translation" - an apparent dig at Italian Capello, whose poor command of the English language saw him face criticism during his four years in charge.

Ferdinand wrote: "I think we need an English manager now, we don't need anything else lost in translation....Harry Redknapp would be my choice by a distance."

Newcastle manager Alan Pardew is another name linked to the England job, or to taking the reins at Spurs if Redknapp becomes national boss.

Pardew believes Redknapp is the obvious candidate for the role and sees his own future on Tyneside.

"Firstly as an Englishman, I am proud to be in that sort of frame, but it's not for me and I will make that quite clear. I am not even in the running as far as I am concerned," he said.

"I am quite happy where I am. I want to stay here and see this job through. I really, really hope that Harry and Spurs and everybody sorts themselves out and can do it in a manner in which it works for everybody."

Bolton boss Owen Coyle also backed Redknapp's candidacy, adding: "In my opinion, what England need is somebody to go in and get that spirit together, that camaraderie and to be a motivator. Harry Redknapp ticks every box, and he also has fantastic football knowledge. When you put that all together, there is no doubt he is a complete package."

Paolo Di Canio, who played under both Capello at AC Milan and Redknapp at West Ham in the 1990s, believes the Englishman would be able to get the best out of the team.

"I don't know if all of them feel the cause when they sing at the beginning of the game. That is crucial to do something more," the Swindon boss said.

"Redknapp can help in this way. To have an English staff in the dressing room, thinking about tactical and technical matters but also to say they must fight for 65million people and they have to feel this shirt on your body, that makes a difference."

Sports minister Hugh Robertson praised FA chairman David Bernstein for his handling of the Terry situation and said: "The moment Capello went on Italian TV and openly criticised them then there was no going back - either the FA had to get him to retract what he had said or he had to go.

"The FA have acted decisively and with enormous integrity. If they had simply tried to sweep this under the carpet they would have been attacked for being weak."

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