Thomas Tuchel will start work as England’s next permanent manager in January, with the FA making several concessions to bring in the German as Gareth Southgate’s successor
Thomas Tuchel will start work as England’s next permanent manager in January, with the FA making several concessions to bring in the German as Gareth Southgate’s successor Thomas Tuchel will start work as England’s next permanent manager in January, with the FA making several concessions to bring in the German as Gareth Southgate’s successor
Thomas Tuchel has been given permission to work from home when he starts his job as England head coach in January.
Tuchel was announced as Gareth Southgate’s permanent successor as Three Lions boss following the October international break. The German will not officially start until the New Year, with interim boss Lee Carsley remaining in charge until then.
The former Chelsea and Bayern Munich boss has been set the task of winning the 2026 World Cup. The 18-month contract the FA have handed to Tuchel is built towards helping him to achieve that goal.
Southgate leaves a huge legacy to build upon, having led England to successive European Championship finals. The former Three Lions chief spent much of his time working from the St George’s Park training facility.
But according to The Sun, Tuchel has been given permission to work remotely for part of the week when he does take charge. He has committed to living in England ‘most of the time’.
He will not be pressured by the FA to attend daily meetings at St George’s Park though. By contrast, Southgate was based at the National Football Centre in Burton for three days a week during his eight years in charge.
England’s former boss demanded a similar level of attendance from his backroom staff. He held frequent meetings with age-group coaches, analysts, coach educators, security and team operation staff.
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Southgate and his assistant Steve Holland also attended an average of five Premier League matches between them each week. Tuchel meanwhile will go to some meetings with junior coaches and other departments.
He plans to split his time between London and his current home in Munich. The German is keen to start work and has insisted he will be working as close to his future squad as possible.
“I love to live in England and I’m looking forward to living again in England. I want to be close to the Premier League, I want to be close to the majority of the players,” Tuchel said after his appointment.
“But of course, the schedule will allow me to be close to my family and my children in Germany. I will be in England most of the time. It’s a new schedule for me, coming from club football – but it’s the FA, with the biggest tradition. It’s the Three Lions.
“It’s the country with the most competitive league and it’s an extraordinary squad of players. Competing with this country and this group of players for the biggest prize was very quickly very exciting for me and my staff. That’s why we didn’t need long to think about it.”
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