Fabio Capello has resigned as England manager, the
Football Association has confirmed.
Capello quit after a meeting with FA chairman David Bernstein and general
secretary Alex Horne at Wembley.
An FA statement read:
"The Football Association can confirm that Fabio Capello has today
resigned as England manager."
On Monday, the
Italian, 65, publicly challenged the FA's decision to strip John Terry of the
captaincy.
The FA's statement continued: "The discussions focused on the FA
Board's decision to remove the England team captaincy from John Terry, and
Fabio Capello's response through an Italian broadcast interview.
"In a meeting for over an hour, Fabio's resignation was accepted and he
will leave the post of England manager with immediate effect."
Bernstein said: "I would like to stress that during [the] meeting and
throughout his time as England manager, Fabio has conducted himself in an
extremely professional manner.
"We have accepted Fabio's resignation, agreeing this is the right
decision. We would like to thank Fabio for his work with the England team and
wish him every success in the future."
A media conference with Bernstein and the Club England management team will
take place at Wembley Stadium on Thursday at 1200 GMT.
The FA will not be making any further comment until the media conference.
Wednesday's meeting was the first time Capello had met the FA since their
decision to remove the armband from Terry pending the outcome of his court case
in July.
Terry, 31, denies a charge of allegedly racially abusing QPR's Anton
Ferdinand.
On Sunday, Capello told Italy's state broadcaster RAI he did not believe
someone should be punished by sporting authorities before a court had reached a
verdict.
"I thought it was right that Terry should keep the captain's
armband," said Capello, whose first game in charge was on 6 February 2008,
against Switzerland.
"I have spoken to the [FA] chairman and I have said that in my opinion
one cannot be punished until it is official and the court - a non-sport court,
a civil court - had made a decision to decide if John Terry has done what he is
accused of."
FA head of elite development Gareth Southgate suggested Under-21 head coach
Stuart Pearce will be in charge for England's friendly against the Netherlands
at Wembley on 29 February.
"Stuart Pearce is in the building and with the under-21s," said
the former England defender.
"But you have to think for the |