Whilst reading through the Stubbs thread it got me thinking about the progression of players into coaches/managers.
As I've mentioned in previous threads, England has fewer UEFA Pro license holders than the Czech Republic so there is obviously something going wrong with senior players becoming educated as coaches.
Perhaps in previous generations players took up coaching because it gave them a living for the remainder of their careers, but with modern players paid so much and tv punditry offering a highly lucrative soap box for casting opinions without having to put your reputation on the line by actually doing the job, it does seem as though more and more players are taking the easy way out.
If you think of our most successful national teams of the past 20 years (Italia 90 and Euro 96), how many of those players are now managers? Contrast that number with how many regularly appear as pundits either on tv, radio or in print?
As I've mentioned in previous threads, England has fewer UEFA Pro license holders than the Czech Republic so there is obviously something going wrong with senior players becoming educated as coaches.
Perhaps in previous generations players took up coaching because it gave them a living for the remainder of their careers, but with modern players paid so much and tv punditry offering a highly lucrative soap box for casting opinions without having to put your reputation on the line by actually doing the job, it does seem as though more and more players are taking the easy way out.
If you think of our most successful national teams of the past 20 years (Italia 90 and Euro 96), how many of those players are now managers? Contrast that number with how many regularly appear as pundits either on tv, radio or in print?