But it may not be a stigma, that's my point. I just don't think there's any English manager capable of taking the Man City job. Same goes for Arsenal and Liverpool.
A part of "being the best" is being able to prove it at the highest level, George Best never got to play at a World Cup, he will never be put in the same bracket at Pele or Maradona, perhaps rightfully, because at the end of the day you have to prove it and to prove it you have to be given a chance.
Potter has got to be one of the best British coaches at the moment. Chelsea are a basket case so he was daft going there in hindsight. Hope he gets a crack at a better big club soon.
That's because in order to manage at the top, you have to manage at a level that is comparative and have success, if the coaches are being gate kept or just plain not considered, they will never reach the level required to become eligible for the top jobs.
Multi-millions are at stake so 'giving someone a chance' isn't like taking on a new tea lady. Football club owners have immense pressure on them so have to do what they think is best. Surely you'd have to agree the list of top English managers is pretty poor. It's up to them to put themselves in the frame tbh.
Lost in translation? Maybe imminent in Swiss means something slightly different! Like a kind of fondue manyana.
It's tough for them when they're competing with every good coach in the world for a small number of jobs all the whilst fighting fan opinion, media opinion and probably boardroom opinion too.
Sorry if said as I'm only dropping in and out today - but the Athletic now reporting Burnley are interviewing Rosenior this week. So if he's the "new" choice, then that won't be quick. I guess it comes back to KLD saying he HOPED it would be imminent. He can't control what other clubs do. And you can very much understand Rosenior wanting to speak to Burnley seeing they have the parachute payments and a reputation for sticking with their managers. We have neither.
Perhaps I've been tainted but whenever I think of an English coach working abroad this comes to mind ... ... the Marcel Marceau of football
I always saw it as a sign nothing was imminent, despite his words saying he hoped to appoint imminently. There was no right word for him to use. Any word he used would have been torn apart. What was clear (to me at least), is if an appointment was imminent, no statement was needed at all. What his statement has essentially done is bought him and the club an extra week with a lot of fans. Although it is starting to look like that might not be enough
I think videos like that are more the sort of thing that reinforces a stereotype. So If you read racial crime statistics and then saw a very specific crime video, it could feed your prejudice. It's a similar effect to that. English coaches are amongst the best now, people come from abroad to learn here, our clubs and league system have very good infrastructure, we're holding ourselves back and it's just weird and unfortunate.
That's fair enough mate but it boils down to nothing more than opinions. I have to ask myself, if English coaches are so good and so adaptable ... ... why don't unemployed ones, like ex-PL Heckingbottom, go to work in any of the many European countries.