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‘SFA can’t compete with Premier League wages’

Figure caption,

Clarke waves goodbye at Scotland team hotel in Charlotte after shock resignation

Purely on a financial basis, it feels unlikely that the SFA could offer a package suitable enough to prise a Premier League boss away from their club.

Clarke was revealed to be earning about £500,000 a year at the time of Euro 2024.

That salary will presumably have increased when he signed a new four-year deal last month, but it will still fall well short of Premier League levels.

Moyes is entering the final year of a multi-million-pound contract at Everton, where he returned for a second spell in 2025 to stabilise the club and has since guided them to back-to-back 13th-place finishes.

The 63-year-old Scot mentioned back in 2021 that he would be interested in leading his nation in the future.

“I think at the right time, when things are right for me and if it’s right for Scotland, then it might be a consideration,” he told BBC Sportsound.

He was then boss at West Ham United, where he led the club to a sixth-place finish in England’s top flight and to the Conference League title.

Undoubtedly still a Premier League-level manager, Moyes has the pedigree to manage Scotland.

But the timing he referenced five years ago still seems off, even before the finances involved in any potential deal are considered.

“We’re not daft enough to think the Premier League isn’t paying high wages,” former Scotland striker Kris Boyd mentioned on Sky Sports.

“In the future, I think Moyes will be a Scotland manager. Right now, he’s the manager of Everton and will be on a big, big salary. The SFA won’t be able to compete with that.”

Postecoglou out of work – but also out of reach?

Figure caption,

Sadness, pride & hysterical commentary – Maxwell on Clarke exit

For out-of-work Postecoglou, who has sometimes offered tactical insight on the Scots during World Cup punditry duties this summer, the timing could be right.

But the elephant in the room, again, would be the numbers involved if he were even interested in heading back to Scotland.

The former Celtic manager was sacked by Nottingham Forest in October after just 39 days in charge.

That came only four months after he was let go by Spurs, having just won them the Europa League – their first trophy in 17 years.

The bullish, winning mentality the Australian exudes would galvanise the Scotland fanbase, many of whom grew frustrated with Clarke’s approach in tournaments.

A lot of those Scottish supporters will also have been regularly exposed to the thrilling brand of football he implemented during a trophy-laden spell at Celtic.

Postecoglou also has four years of experience in senior international management, having been Australia boss between 2013 and 2017.

He won the 2015 Asian Cup after taking the nation to the 2014 World Cup, where they exited at the group stage in a brutal section featuring holders Spain, 2010 runners-up Netherlands and Chile.

Postecoglou ticks nearly every box, but with a revealed £5m yearly salary at Spurs followed by a supposed £3m-a-season deal at Forest, it would be fanciful to think the SFA can come anywhere near matching those figures.

Although Clarke felt like the standout candidate at the time – and went on to prove himself the right choice – poaching him from Kilmarnock highlights the pond Scotland were fishing in then.

With standards raised after three major finals appearances across the Clarke era, the coming weeks will tell us how ambitious the SFA are prepared to be in their search to replace arguably the nation’s most successful men’s head coach.

Related topics

  • Scotland Sport
  • Scottish Football
  • Scotland Men’s Football Team
  • FIFA World Cup 2026
  • Football
  • Everton

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