Man Utd 'consider Gareth Southgate as next manager' if Ole Gunnar Solskjaer is sacked

Manchester United are reportedly considering moving for Gareth Southgate. [Courtesy]

Manchester United are considering making a move for England manager Gareth Southgate to replace Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

The former Middlesbrough boss has seen his stock skyrocket after an impressive stint in charge of the Three Lions.

But Southgate may harbour feelings of animosity towards United after the club attempted to block his initial move into management, according to the Sun.

The 49-year-old became Boro boss in 2006 when Steve McClaren left to take the England job following the dismissal of Sven Goran Eriksson.

But due to the fact Southgate was still taking his coaching Pro Licence badge, his appointment on Teesside needed to be approved by other Premier League teams.

Manchester United are reportedly considering moving for Gareth Southgate.[Courtesy]

United were the only top-flight outfit to reject Southgate's appointment, meaning it was passed by 19 votes to one. After a three-year spell at Middlesbrough, Southgate moved into the England setup with the U-21 side.

And the England boss is now a man in demand after guiding the country to the World Cup semi-finals in 2018.

Solskjaer, meanwhile, is struggling to fight off the critics after a tricky start to the season at Old Trafford.

Gareth Southgate took charge of Middlesbrough in 2006 after Steve McClaren's departure. [Courtesy]

United have won just four of their 14 Premier League games so far, increasing speculation that the Norwegian will be dismissed.

Mauricio Pochettino's recent sacking also hasn't helped matters as he continues to be touted as Solskjaer's replacement.

But the Red Devils chief insists he isn't fazed by potentially losing his to the Argentinian or any other manager.

“No, it doesn't make me more concerned,” said Solskjaer.

“I'm just focusing on my job and that's doing as well as I can, look forward to the next game, look long term and plan things with board. “I'm good, absolutely no problem, sometimes you laugh when you read stories about what I've said, but at least I know the sources are not sources and are just made up blatant lies.

“It's that time of year, it's never nice to see your colleagues lose their job in a very short space of time.

"With some of them, you can talk about VAR all day long. You don't know the reasons, but one result, Southampton against Watford, with the handball, and we're talking about something completely different. Sometimes you have luck, sometimes you don't."

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