PFA Chief Executive Gordon Taylor is opposed to the future England coach taking over on a part-time basis. The Football Association are currently hunting for a successor to Sven-Goran Eriksson following this summer's World Cup, but Taylor does not believe the way forward is to appoint someone in a temporary capacity.PSV Eindhoven manger Guus Hiddink, who is reported to be interested in succeeding Eriksson at Soho Square, is also the part-time boss of the Australian national squad but Taylor feels appointing a short-term coach is not the way forward.Taylor said: "I think it's extremely difficult given the intensity and pressure to look at it part-time. It would send out the wrong message to the public, although it's an interesting point give the fact the players aren't working 100 per cent for the FA. But seeing as though Eriksson's salary was worth millions of pounds a year, I can't see the FA going down the part-time route."There is a problem offering the job on a part-time basis to a coach working with a Premier League club, because what happens if that team suddenly starts to do badly. Hiddink is an exceptional case and there might me economical reasons why Australia chose to go down that route."The Chief Executive says he would also prefer to see an Englishman given the job after the showpiece in Germany."It should be a chance for an Englishman. It is a bad reflection on football in this country – the strongest in the world for football – if we can't produce a quality coach and manager. I believe that we have people who have not only played the game, but have coached and managed at the highest level, and I think it would be nice for them to get the opportunity."Former England skipper Alan Shearer echoes Taylor's point of view."People will say he should be English but we want success. Ideally, it would be an Englishman, though. The job is about getting results. "Marco van Basten and Jurgen Klinsmann did not have any experience before taking charge of Holland and Germany. They are both doing remarkably well so I don't know how important that is," said Shearer.