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Tuesday 26 November 2024 12:02 pm

30 per cent: Football Association sets diversity target for England coaches

By: Frank Dalleres

Sports Editor

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The FA wants more non-white England coaches like Joleon Lescott and Ashley Cole, who worked under Lee Carsley
The FA wants more non-white England coaches like Joleon Lescott and Ashley Cole, who worked under Lee Carsley

The Football Association (FA) wants 30 per cent of England men’s team coaches to be from ethnically diverse backgrounds by 2028.

The governing body was told earlier this year it needed to “work a lot harder” to create a diverse pool of candidates for the England head coach position by the Black Footballers Partnership.

The BFP cited the lack of realistic homegrown options from diverse backgrounds to replace Gareth Southgate when he resigned in the summer.

BFP data published last year which found 43 per cent of Premier League players were black, but that has not translated into coaching positions.

The FA has set itself a “stretch target” of 30 per cent of the England men’s coaching staff – covering the senior team down to the under-17s – to be of a black, Asian, mixed or other ethnic background.

The minimum target it has set itself is 25 per cent, compared to the current level of 19 per cent.

“Tackling discrimination is one of our core ambitions so we will continue to unite the game to confront this societal issue,” said FA chief executive Mark Bullingham.

Notable non-white members of recent coaching teams include Jimmy Floyd-Hasselbaink, who worked under Southgate, and Ashley Cole and Joleon Lescott, who assisted recent interim boss Lee Carsley.

FA’s lower diversity target for women’s teams

The FA is also looking to increase ethnic diversity within the Lionesses coaching staff down to the under-17s, and has set a stretch target of 15 per cent compared to the current four per cent.

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It also wants 60 per cent of the women’s team coaching staff to be female by 2028.

The figures are included in the FA’s new four-year , titled A Game Free From Discrimination, which was published on Tuesday.

The strategy sets out how the FA intends to improve the diversity of participants and officials at all levels of English football, drive inclusion by ensuring everyone feels welcome, and tackle discrimination by improving education and making it easier to challenge and report.

At the start of the season the FA introduced a rule making the reporting of workforce diversity data mandatory for all professional clubs in the English leagues.

The rule came into effect at the start of this season and clubs will need to provide their first reports next summer, and then every two years after that.

“Through our new strategy, we will work with our partners across football to boost representation, drive inclusion and tackle discrimination at all levels of our game,” added Bullingham.

“We have seen how the power of football can bring communities together and celebrate diversity, and we want to continue to use our influence to deliver positive and lasting change that we can all be proud of.”

PA Sport contributed to this report.

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