Ralf Rangnick: Manchester United interim manager named Austria boss
- Published
Manchester United interim manager Ralf Rangnick has been named Austria boss.
Rangnick will still take on his consultancy role with United as planned at the end of this season.
"I'm really looking forward to playing my part in helping United become a real force again," he said.
The 63-year-old German has signed a two-year deal with Austria and will join up with them after the Premier League season ends in May.
"It is an honour for me to take on the role of manager," he said.
"The prospect of contesting the European Championships in Germany with a young team hungry for success fills me with great anticipation."
Austria, 23rd in the Fifa rankings, have been without a head coach since the resignation of Franco Foda in March following their failure to qualify for this year's World Cup.
"We are very pleased that we were able to win an outstanding expert in international football as team boss," said Gerhard Milletich, president of the Austrian Football Association.
"We are all convinced that he is the ideal man and that his vision will advance the national team."
United have won 10 of their 25 games in all competitions since Rangnick replaced the sacked Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in November.
United are sixth in the table, five points behind fourth-placed Arsenal with three games remaining.
Ajax boss Erik ten Hag will take over in the summer, becoming United's fifth permanent manager since Sir Alex Ferguson's retirement in 2013.
Rangnick left his role as head of sports and development at Russian club Lokomotiv Moscow to move to United, having built an impressive coaching reputation in Germany.
He set Ulm on course for promotion to the Bundesliga for the first time before spells in charge of Stuttgart, Hannover, Hoffenheim, Schalke and RB Leipzig.
He won the German Cup and reached the Champions League semi-finals with Schalke in 2011.
Analysis
BBC Sport's Simon Stone
In negotiating his two-year consultancy role at United that will take effect from the end of the season, Rangnick made it clear he wanted to be free to take on other roles.
Evidently, it would be difficult if he was at another club. The international game is different and, with so many players from the Red Bull franchise in the Austria squad, the appeal is obvious.
However, Rangnick has also stated he is committed to the two-year, six-day-a-month consultancy role he has agreed with United. It is up to them how much they tap into Rangnick, who will step away if his services are not required.
Under the circumstances, that would not be a great move. His input could be invaluable if United are to recover from this miserable campaign.
A ruthless poisoner or an abused wife? Lucy Worsley investigates a Victorian woman at the centre of a sensational unsolved poisoning case
'A pub of the mind': Josh Widdicombe steps into the correct realm and creates his ideal pub