- Gareth Southgate pockets a reported £5million per year as England manager
- The salaries of every manager at Euro 2024 have been revealed by research
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Gareth Southgate is the highest-paid manager of all at Euro 2024, raking in approximately £5million according to reports.
The wages of every single manager at the tournament in Germany have been revealed by ‘intensive and rigorous’ research.
Southgate’s remuneration sees him take home almost 30 times that of Georgia boss Willy Sagnol, a former World Cup finalist with France, who is reportedly earning just shy of £170,000. That’s the sort of figure you’d expect in League One.
The figures have mostly been compiled by Finance Football.com, but where possible, Mail Sport has cross-referenced the figures with other reports and made adjustments if necessary.
Southgate penned his new deal back in 2021 to become the highest-paid international football manager.
That puts him comfortably clear of his fellow podium-sitters in Germany’s Julian Nagelsmann, who pockets £4m per year, and Portugal’s Roberto Martinez, who is paid £3.4m per annum.
France boss Didier Deschamps earns £3.2m-a-year while and Luciano Spalletti (Italy) and Ronald Koeman (Netherlands) round off the top five/six, beefing up their wallets by £2.5m each season.
That said, Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf has previously reported a significantly lower figure of a £1m base salary for Koeman’s pay.
Meanwhile, Football Italia has previously claimed that Spalletti is entitled to bonuses worth up to £0.84m per year.
Slightly lower down, Croatia’s Zlatko Dalic earns £1.3m per season – despite once demanding £3.8m and claiming he was the ‘second-best coach in the world’ after guiding the team to the World Cup final in 2018.
For such a big footballing nation, Spain aren’t paying Luis de la Fuente as much as their rivals on £1m-a-year, which could be a bargain if they go far.
Scotland’s Steve Clark ranks 17th on the list, with The Guardian previously claiming that he earns £500,000 per year with qualifying incentives.
Georgia’s Sagnol props up the list on £170,000. That said, he is not far behind Romania’s Edward Iordanescu on £200,000 and Czechia’s Ivan Hasek on £210,000.
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