Friday 1 July 2016 08:35, UK
The three men tasked with finding a successor to England manager Roy Hodgson will begin the process on Friday.
Hodgson stepped down after four years in the position following Monday's humiliating 2-1 defeat by Iceland in Nice.
The 68-year-old reluctantly faced the media the following day, alongside FA chief executive Martin Glenn, one of the trio responsible for appointing a new boss.
Glenn, who admits he is "not a football expert" will be joined on the panel by FA technical director Dan Ashworth and FA vice-chairman David Gill.
England U21 coach Gareth Southgate is seen as an ideal replacement for Hodgson but the former Middlesbrough manager insists he is only interested in the role on a temporary basis.
West Ham boss Slaven Bilic and new Celtic counterpart Brendan Rodgers have ruled themselves out of the running but a number of top coaches are keen on the post, including Germany legend Jurgen Klinsmann.
Bookmakers have installed the US national manager as favourite with former England coach Glenn Hoddle and Sunderland boss Sam Allardyce next in the betting.
Support has also been noted for Arsene Wenger, fellow-Frenchman Laurent Blanc and former West Ham and Spurs boss Harry Redknapp, one of the favourites prior to Hodgson's appointment in 2012.