News about Roy Hodgson

For the first time since the Wagatha Christie fee hearing, smiling Rebekah Vardy is seen

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 7, 2022
The 40-year-old's slowed down as she strolled around a stunning Lincolnshire park with three-year-old Olivia and an enormous German Shepherd enjoying the sights, which included a large herd of fallow deer. Rebekah, a long brown coat, black trousers, and a white wooly hat, smiled and chuckled as she listened to the boy during the short outing.

Coleen Rooney is 'outraged and astonished' at Vardy's jibe

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 5, 2022
Last night, Rebekah (left, with Jamie) shared a series of Instagram messages, one of which suggested that her rival should give up the money. However, Coleen (right)'s friend said the WAG is greatly harmed by the posts because, nine months before the High Court's libel showdown began, she suggested that some of the funds be donated to charity and pay their own expenses. Rebekah's claim was deemed 'outrageous' by a Coleen friend. Rebekah's 'tense times' ahead as she decides to pay off a £3.7 million court bill following her Wagatha Christie trial defeat, which she now owes to The Sun, potentially pushing the total amount over £4 million.

Harry Redknapp says he was charged by Tottenham Hotspur for a £15 million buy-out clause

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 29, 2022
Given how Fabio Capello led Spurs to the Champions League for the first time in their history, it was the overwhelming favorite to replace him as the next Three Lions boss. Roy Hodgson (main picture, right) as the England boss after being drafted as a shoo-in for the position, but the FA denied him as England manager rather, leaving fans wondering why Redknapp didn't get the nod. Redknapp believes that it was his 'crazy' £15 million buy-out clause in his Spurs contract that barred the FA from even giving him a tour a decade ago.

IAN LADYMAN: Ange is a footballer who plays for Southgate. England was a laughing stock six years ago

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 25, 2022
During the European Championships in the summer of 2016, I was staying in a hotel in Paris. England was playing Iceland in Nice, France. On a hot night in the capital, I had the windows open, and people watching televisions in the bars and cafes near Gare du Nord started to laugh as Iceland defeated Roy Hodgson's team home at the first knockout stage (left). And that was England back then. To anyone else but the English, England was amusing. That was the England that had Harry Kane taking corners and Wayne Rooney in midfield. Now is the time to ask Gareth Southgate (centre) in question. It's correct to wonder superficially at alternatives. However, it is inaccurate to say that Southgate is not the same as something he is not. It is inaccurate to focus on his accomplishments (right, he's in the Euro 2020 final). On his watch, England has risen to a major football nation. We would all have taken that six years ago in Nice and Paris.

England takes a very surprising stand on the abuses of human rights by the World Cup hosts

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 21, 2022
MARTIN SAMUEL - CHIEF SPORTS WRITER: A mealy-mouthed word concocted to sound like real protest and action, but in reality, it means less than nothing. Yet beyond these empty platitudes, these woven gestures, what more could the Football Association and England have done?How could they, or any of the European nations, have taken positive action against the Qatar World Cup?By stopping it?Actually saving lives by preventing it happening? Well, yes, there was that. A international boycott of the tournament may have changed that if the major footballing nations joined together soon after FIFA's corrupt decision to relocate their marquee tournament to the Gulf, and heaven knows how many migrant workers died before the tournament's conclusion on December 2, 2010. Had these nations united when the decision was made to change the date of the tournament from summer to winter, it would now be a World Cup that no one actually supported in a referendum, which would have resulted in a referendum. And if they stood united and broadcast at any time during the last 11 years, their protests may have mattered and had an effect.

Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish is lauded by Joel Ward

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 11, 2022
CARA SLOMAN: He's one of them. Ward is the longest active player at Palace. He has been there for more than a decade. No one has soaked in the glories of promotion and has followed every step along the way. Even Wilfried Zaha joined Manchester United for a while. He's seen the club change and expand, becoming Patrick Vieira's 10th permanent manager. Ian Holloway and Neil Warnock, Alan Pardew and Roy Hodgson, and now under Vieira, they've all developed a new identity and style of play. And yet, though much has changed, what matters is what hasn't changed.

MARTIN SAMUEL: Graham Potters' step-up to Chelsea is a victory for all English managers

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 8, 2022
MARTIN SAMUEL – WRITER CHIEF SPORTS WRITER: Jurgen Klopp accepted the Borussia Dortmund job because he did well at Mainz, which was an honor. After success at Bari, Atalanta, and Siena, Antonio Conte was rejected by Juventus. Rafa Benitez's door was opened in Valencia because he has worked with Osasuna, Extremadura, and Tenerife. It's only in England where the elite think our league doesn't count; where a boss can squander away at clubs with no chance of success; and yet another is punished for not being profitable. This is why the Chelsea managerial change is cause for celebration in at least. Graham Potter's work at Brighton, as well as Swansea's, has been acknowledged. Todd Boehly has done English football a service by not only moving for the most popular name - Zinedine Zidane, one imagines.

Many that run Premier League clubs, according to Gary Neville, must reach fans

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 4, 2022
GARY NEVILLE: Owner funding isn't a problem as long as they can afford it, as Sheikh Mansour explains. However, it does raise concerns about how a state interacts with the Premier League in particular. And what regulations must be used to limit owner funding. But we're sure there are still more pressing questions of a more serious nature to ask when considering whether Abu Dhabi and now Saudi Arabia should be a Premier League club. We all marvel at Pep Guardiola's Manchester City, but should more questions be asked about the money that pays for it?

Rebekah Vardy 'WON'T appeal the High Court's decision, which resulted in her dismissal of the Wagatha Christie libel case,' she said.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 3, 2022
With a judge ruling against Rebekah at the High Court, the WAG, a Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy, 35, sued Coleen, 36, for libel after she suspected Rebekah of broadcasting "false news" to the public.