3) Michael Laudrup (Unattached)
Still without a new team since leaving Swansea City earlier in the 2013/14 season, Michael Laudrup would have to be one of the leading candidates for England to consider after his tremendous work in the Premier League. The Dane, one of the all-time European greats as a player, took his attack-minded philosophy with him into management, and got Swansea playing a highly attractive and effective brand of attacking football that saw them finish 9th in the table in 2012/13, as well as win the Capital One Cup the same year. With patience and composure on the ball so often lacking for England, Laudrup’s tactics could work wonders on this group of players, as he raised the games of so many at the Liberty Stadium that one would not necessarily think of as top class players.
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