QPR Sack Ex-England Manager Steve McClaren

Queens Park Rangers have sacked manager Steve McClaren
following a run of one win in 15 Championship games.
The 57-year-old, who was England boss between August 2006
and November 2007, was appointed in May 2018.
Rangers have won just once in the league since 26 December
and are 17th in the table, eight points above the relegation zone.
McClaren's assistant John Eustace has been placed in interim
charge while the west London club search for a new boss.
"Making a decision such as this is never easy,
particularly when you are talking about someone as professional and dedicated
as Steve," chief executive Lee Hoos said in a statement on the club
website.
"It is well documented that we are in a period of
transition as we work hard to make the club financially stable.
"As we look to the future, and taking recent results
into account, we feel now is the right time to re-evaluate where we are."
McClaren, who won 16 of his 46 games in charge of the R's,
had been working under financial restrictions at Loftus Road following the
club's £42m settlement with the English Football League last summer
for breaches of Financial Fair Play regulations during the 2013-14 season.
The club only made two permanent signings last summer,
bringing in defender Toni Leistner and veteran full-back Angel Rangel on free transfers,
before signing thee players on season-long loan deals.
The R's began the Championship season with four consecutive
defeats but recovered during the autumn and, after beating Ipswich on Boxing
Day, were two points off the play-off places.
McClaren guided QPR to the fifth round of the FA Cup for the
first time since 1997, but ultimately paid the price for their poor league form
in 2019, with a seven-match losing streak in January and February seeing the
Hoops slide down the table.
"I would like to thank our fans for their patience and
unwavering support during what has been a very difficult run of results, at a
time when the club faces well-documented challenges," Rangers chairman
Amit Bhatia said.
"We must now work towards ending this season positively
and building for the future."
McClaren's departure from QPR adds a disappointing chapter
to his varied managerial career, which has seen him take charge of five English
clubs and two other sides in Europe.
He won the League Cup in 2003-04 with
Middlesbrough, who he then led to the Uefa Cup final in 2005-06, before leaving
Teesside that summer to take charge of the national team.
However, his spell with England only lasted 18 games and
he left the role after England failed to qualify for Euro 2008 following a
3-2 defeat by Croatia at Wembley.
He rebuilt his career in the Netherlands, guiding Twente
to the Eredivisie title in 2009-10, and then became the first Englishman
to manage in Germany's Bundesliga in 2010, but was sacked by Wolfsburg in
February 2011 with the club one point above the relegation zone.
A short stint in charge of Nottingham Forest followed , he
resigned after 112 days after three wins in 13 games before he returned to
Twente for a second time in 2012.
He then had two spells in charge of Derby County, either
side of time managing Newcastle United.
McClaren lost a Championship play-off final with the Rams in
2014 and won just six of 28 Premier League games in charge of the
Magpies during 2015-16 as the Tyneside club were relegated from the top flight.
His second spell at Derby lasted five months and came
to an end in March 2017, with the club 10 points adrift of the play-off
places in the second tier.
FROM .bbc.com/sport/football
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