Roy Hodgson will be named Liverpool manager today after agreeing a two-year deal to replace Rafa Benitez.
Anfield bosses have ended a month-long search for Benitez's successor after assessing a short-list that also included Manuel Pellegrini and Didier Deschamps.

Hodgson's experience and recent track record at Fulham gave him a decisive edge, and he will begin his Anfield reign with immediate effect on a two-year deal worth around £3million a year. Fulham will receive around £2.5m in compensation.
The 62-year old will bring assistant-manager and goalkeeping coach Mike Kelly with him to Anfield and will waste no time trying to persuade Steven Gerrard and Fernando Torres to stay put.
Gerrard is a leading target for the Spanish club along with Chelsea left back Ashley Cole. Real director general Jorge intend to bring in two more players, following the arrival of Argentina winger Angel di Maria from Benfica in a £20million deal.
Alan Curbishley has been installed as the clear favourite to replace Hodgson as manager of Fulham. The former Charlton and West Ham boss is on a short list at Craven Cottage which also includes Sven Goran Eriksson and Mark Hughes.
Former England manager Eriksson, who is a free agent after standing down as Ivory Coast coach, is aware of Fulham's interest and would be tempted by a return to the Premier League. Hughes has rejected the chance of a lucrative contract with Dubai team Al Ahli.

It is a fair bet to say Roy Hodgson wouldn't have seen himself being here, on the verge of taking over at Liverpool, a year ago. The 62-year-old may have thought his chance to manage a true giant of the game had come and gone way back in 1999, when he departed the San Siro and Inter for a second time after a short spell as caretaker.
Hodgson was still recovering from his unceremonious sacking by Blackburn just before Christmas the previous year, and it would be nine years after leaving Ewood Park that Fulham owner Mohamed Al-Fayed gave him another crack at the Premier League.
Hodgson's imminent appointment already appears to have split supporter opinion on Merseyside. Some welcome his stability and experience, whereas others feel his arrival is a step back from Rafael Benitez, even given the Spaniard's travails in his last year at the club.
What is clear is that the new man has plenty to do to ensure Liverpool's Premier League season doesn't simply follow on from last campaign's write-off. Goal looks at what should be on his list.....
The mooted fee, with Jose Mourinho and company unwilling to spend much more than £20m, would not cover an adequate replacement so surely Hodgson's best bet is to get the skipper onside, making him central to his plans and using his knowledge of the club to help plan the future on the field.
His tigerish play and positional know-how is important and he is clearly one of the world's premier defensive midfielders.
This was overdue. Envious eyes were cast at the likes of Arsenal and their ability to bring products through into the first team.
A new left-back will be a priority (especially with the departure of Fabio Aurelio), at least one quality striker would be good, and a midfield player needs to appear from somewhere who can bring the ball forward from in front of the defence and accurately distribute.
The uncomfortable fact remains that Hicks and Gillett appear set to stay at Anfield for a while yet given their ludicrously-optimistic valuation of a club they have burdened with debt since they arrived in February 2007.
Don't attempt to get rid of Mascherano for $_$. no one can save the relationship between owners and fans, only $$ can.
Please do a trading deal with Rafa's Inter with Lucas going out & Wesley in. rafa dont do intelligent deals right? so i guess this one will suit him.
ty
zamora the new crouch?? ![]()
i say its liverpool!!biggest flop in 2010/2009