England U21 coach Joleon Lescott has long-term plans to be a sporting director
Joleon Lescott is eager to follow in Les Ferdinand’s footsteps and become a director of football
Your support helps us to tell the story
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.
At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.
The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.
Your support makes all the difference.Joleon Lescott has long-term plans to become a sporting director but is excited to offer support to England’s Under-21 players whilst on his own journey of development.
The 39-year-old was recently appointed as part of Lee Carsley’s coaching staff with the Young Lions, having left his position as loan manager at Manchester City in the summer.
Lescott’s role at the Etihad Stadium was part of a plan to eventually remain in football at boardroom level but the chance to work with the next generation of talent in this country was an opportunity which suited the former defender.
While the job title is England Under-21 coach, the BT Sport pundit and Football Association view the specifications as more broad.
“I know there is a long way to go for me to become a top coach and it is not necessary something I am thinking about, it is more developing players really,” Lescott told the PA news agency.
“The roles have to fit with where I want to go and that is more of an admin side, so sporting director or technical director, that is the route I want to take. The things I am studying are helping me towards that and to be recognised, taken more seriously, but the coaching elements are more mentoring roles than being on the grass every day.
“I have a plan in place for what I want to achieve and I know there is a lot of hard work that will go before that, so I am ready and excited to be on the right path.”
The ex-Everton and City centre-back decided to step away from his old club to concentrate on a Masters degree in sports directorship whilst also taking part in courses to improve his self-development.
With a rough goal of having the required qualifications and experience behind him by the time he turns 45, Lescott is aware when he does start applying for jobs he will be one of few from black and ethnic minority backgrounds going for such roles.
Les Ferdinand at QPR is a rare example of a director of football in England who is not white, and two-time Premier League winner Lescott insisted: “I believe I have something to offer and I owe the game something because it has given me so much.
“In regards to the representation (in coaching and at boardroom level), it is nowhere near enough but Lee and the FA made it clear I wasn’t ticking any boxes.
“They said this is the role, this is the role you have been doing and it mirrors up with what we want the role to look like so that was enough for me. It is helpful I know Lee and Ashley Cole but yeah moving forward hopefully I am part of the transition where mindsets change with how we view coaching and sporting directors, but my goal is to be a success.
“Hopefully I inspire other players and generations but I am just here to do the best I can.”
Lescott’s first week as part of the England Under-21 set-up was eventful with their match in Romania scheduled for last Friday postponed due to a couple of positive Covid-19 cases, but the squad ended an up-and-down few days with a 2-0 win over Kosovo on Tuesday.
The 26-cap Three Lions international added: “The first part of the week was long due to not having a game and that day where we were due to fly, then having to be stuck in our rooms whilst we isolated to make sure everything was OK.
“Luckily everyone was healthy and then we had the game on Tuesday. I was speaking to Ashley and it was crazy how we were equally as excited as when we played, but it didn’t feel the same level of pressure because it is a different type of pressure.
“I really enjoyed it though, it is a great bunch of players and staff. It is a new group, an exciting group and hopefully there is success there.
“We all believe we can help in different ways and add value to their careers, which is key. Yes we want to be successful as Under-21 coaches, but the goal is to propel these players into the senior team. That is our focus; can we prepare players for Gareth Southgate and the seniors? Hopefully we’re able to do that.”
Although Lescott will be busy during international breaks, he will continue to be a pundit for BT Sport across their Champions League coverage whilst also studying.
Having watched Manchester City fall short of European glory in May, the Birmingham-born ace hopes the arrival of Jack Grealish can be the difference.
“They are definitely as strong as last year. Sergio (Aguero) didn’t feature as much and coming in is Jack, who is an exceptional talent,” Lescott said.
“After going so close and having not quite done it, I am sure there is determination there to get over the line.”
:: BT Sport is the exclusive home of UEFA Champions League football. Watch every game of the 2021/22 competition live on TV, online and on the BT Sport app. For more info, visit btsport.com