The Football Association, according to its chairwoman Debbie Hewitt, has faith in England manager Gareth Southgate.
Following a humiliating 4-0 loss to Hungary last week, England is facing relegation from the Nations League.
Hewitt praised Southgate’s “resilience and accountability” in her first public comments since becoming FA chair last year.
“Based on any facts on the pitch, he is the most successful England manager we’ve had for 55 years,” she said.
“But the bit people don’t see is the culture he’s created.
“Prior to Gareth being the manager there was not the pride of wearing the England shirt. There was a club rivalry we would read about, players not getting on.
“He’s changed that beyond recognition and I’ve seen that for myself.
“I’ve worked in business and Gareth’s skills, his high IQ, would make him a chief executive in any sphere.
“That resilience and accountability. There’s no sloped shoulders, and that’s what you want in an England manager.”
Southgate has led England to the 2018 World Cup semi-finals and then to their first European Championship final since taking over in 2016.
Hewitt said she spoke to Southgate to reassure him following the team’s recent poor form, and she backed the FA’s decision last year to extend the 51-year-contract old’s to 2024 rather than wait until after this year’s World Cup in Qatar.
“I think that’s a bit of a red herring, in a sense, because I don’t think we would be discussing it had we not had the recent series of games,” she said.
“Clearly we did that with proper discussion and thought. The fact there’s been a stumble does not make us automatically say ‘should we have given him a contract?’
“We have confidence in Gareth for all the reasons I described and I think that’s the important thing. And it’s particularly important going into the biggest tournament.
“Gareth’s reaction (to her call), as in everything with that sort of conversation, was that it is his accountability, that there’s always something to learn.
“That’s why it’s refreshing working with somebody like that because that openness to learn is quite remarkable and quite unusual in any sphere.”