Article body analysed

By OLLIE LEWIS, DEPUTY SPORTS EDITOR Published: 08: 46 AEDT, 28 December 2025 | Updated: 10: 57 AEDT, 28 December 2025 49 View comments John Terry has declared he has no interest in taking the managerial vacancy at Championship strugglers Oxford United. Terry, 44, enjoyed a hugely impressive playing career for Chelsea and England, winning 17 trophies with the Blues, before he ending his playing career at Aston Villa. Earlier this year, he had moaned at the lack of opportunities to start his coaching career, but on Saturday distanced himself with reports linking him with a move to The Us - who are languishing in 21st position in the Championship.   After retiring, he looked set for a coaching career and joined the set up at Villa Park as Dean Smith's No 2. Together, they got the club promoted to the Premier League, before establishing the Villans as a top-flight side. Terry departed in the summer of 2021 and it was widely expected he would move into management, with the former defender linked to roles at several clubs, including Newcastle. However, nothing materialised, and bar a short stint as Smith's assistant at Leicester City and a role as a coaching consultant in Chelsea's academy, Terry's career in the dugout has stalled.   John Terry has ruled himself out of the managerial vacancy at Oxford United Reports had linked the Chelsea legend with the vacancy with the Championship strugglers The 44-year-old's lack of progression is all the more perplexing to him when a number of his former teammates - including Frank Lampard, Steven Gerrard and Wayne Rooney - have held managerial roles at multiple clubs. 'Good morning, just on the golf course, ' he said in a video posted to Tik Tok. 'I'm not sure where these rumours have come from, I'm certainly not on the lookout for a job.   'I've spoken about how much I love my role at Chelsea in the academy, working w/the players in progressing them from the youth team, to reserves, to the first team, and the involvement I have in that.   'I've certainly not approached Oxford, not spoken to anybody at all, so I just want to completely rule myself out of it.   'I wish Oxford and whoever goes in as manager all the very best, but it certainly won't be me. Up the Chels. '  Earlier this year, Terry accepted that his 'dream' of becoming an elite manager may be over. 'I'm not sure it ever happens, to be honest. It's my one last dream I have at the football club. I've done everything at Chelsea. And for me now, the one thing that is missing is being the manager of the football club, ' he said 'That's why I went into coaching when I finished playing. My idea and dream was to learn my trade a bit. As a player, you retire after 22 years… Listen, 100 per cent, you learn enough to go into management.   'The level I played at and the managers I played under. But it doesn't give you the right you go into management at a certain level. You still have to learn and understand what it takes.   'There's a lot more that goes into the coaching side of it. So I went away and learnt my trade, I had some unbelievable times at Villa, I left Villa to be a number one, I thought I was ready. I think I'd be a really good number one, I enjoyed the coaching side of it.   Terry admitted earlier this year he may have to give up on his dream of managing Chelsea  'I want people around me that are better coaches than me. Then I could lead the dressing room and the team like I did [as a player]. That's what I did for 22 years at the club. I know I'd be good at it. Will I ever get the chance? I'm not sure, without doing the other bits. But when people tell you you've not got the experience, it's difficult to fathom. '  Terry previously claimed his experience working under Smith should have put him in good stead for a managerial role at a club lower in the food chain, but no offers were forthcoming.  'When I went into Villa I got great experience under Dean Smith and we got promotion, which was incredible.   'As an assistant coach in the Premier League and the experience I've had as a player and an individual captain in both Chelsea and England, I thought that would be enough to get me a job. 'I'm not saying a job in the Premier League or the Championship - but a job at League One level. ' Terry continued: 'I didn't even get a sniff. I had interviews and it was just "you have no experience". When I see some people managing today, it baffles me, it really does.   'In terms of 'am I frustrated', yes, absolutely, because I have a lot of good attributes to be a really good coach or a really good manager but, unfortunately, that's not happened. ' 

Share what you think

The comments below have not been moderated.

The views expressed in the contents above are those of our users and do not necessarily reflect the views of Mail Online.

By posting your comment you agree to our house rules. Do you want to automatically post your Mail Online comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to Mail Online as usual.   Do you want to automatically post your Mail Online comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to Mail Online as usual We will automatically post your comment and a link to the news story to your Facebook timeline at the same time it is posted on Mail Online. To do this we will link your Mail Online account with your Facebook account. We’ll ask you to confirm this for your first post to Facebook. You can choose on each post whether you would like it to be posted to Facebook. Your details from Facebook will be used to provide you with tailored content, marketing and ads in line with our Privacy Policy.