Steve Mcclaren
Fabio Capello was made manager of England in 2008.
The England Manager
The manager of the England team is the Italian, Fabio Capello.
No.
Grammatically, both phrasings are correct, but one is potentially ambiguous. new England manager Fabio Capello : This could be confused with "New England manager Fabio Capello." New England is located in the United States (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut). England's new manager Fabio Capello : This is much less ambiguous and probably a better phrasing
The England team manager is Fabio Capello
Fabio Capello
The manager of the GB&NI football team at the 2012 Olympics is Stuart Pearce.
Fabio Capello was the manager of A.C. Milan for two years.
Fabio Capello
Neil Shorrock will be named the England manager when the F.A finds out he is way better than the current manager, Capello. He will insall Gil as his Assisstant manager, and Tahib will be named as the Captain.
If the manager IS Welsh, then he or she is the Welsh manager.For example, Tony Pulis is the Welsh manager of Stoke City's football team (2011). Pulis is Welsh but Stoke City is in England, not Wales.Similarly, Fabio Capello is Italian and manages England's national football team (2011). So Capello is the Italian manager of the England team, not the English manager!But the person who manages a 'Wales' team, department or regional office is the Wales manager, a title which would distinguish his/her role from that of the Scotland manager, the England manager, the Germany manager or the Europe manager. Capello is the England manager (2011), meaning he is the manager of England's national football team.EXAMPLES'John Toshack has stood down as Wales manager' -BBB news, 9 September 2010'Lawrie Sanchez ready to apply for Wales manager job' -BBC news, 29 October 2010'Fabio Capello's five biggest mistakes as England manager' -news headline, Telegraph, 9 February 2011USAGE VARIATIONSAlthough not strictly correct, expressions such as 'Welsh manager' are often used when what is really meant is the Wales manager.For example, a February 9, 2011 headline says "Lars Lagerback Cut In Betting To Become Next Welsh Manager"But immediately underneath, in the text of the news item, it explains "Lars Lagerback is the new favourite in the betting to become the next Wales Manager"(Lars Lagerback is Swedish, by the way!)-------------------------------------------------------------For references see Related links below-