Speaking to Betway, Allardyce said: "The FA have let the coaches down, and I'll tell you why. When I joined England for the short period that I did, sadly for me, they knew what they were trying to do was, infrastructure-wise, move everybody to St. George's Park, which they did. If you didn't move to St. George's Park, you lost your job, and the whole infrastructure of St. George's Park was put in place right the way through to senior level, which was very exciting for me and I thought was an absolutely brilliant idea.
"Now you've seen that just eroded in one fell swoop, because it was there to bring on and develop all coaches at all levels in the future, to bring English coaches through to manage the national team in the end. But it's very, very difficult because I'm a massive lover of the Premier League, and always have been for the life and opportunity it's given me to be a manager there. But there's four [British] managers, I think. There's only, I think, three British owners, which is West Ham, Crystal Palace and Brighton.
"Last but not least, Wolves have been playing for a lot of the season with no English players in the team. So it shows that while the Premier League is the best league in the world, and I've had a fantastic time doing, from a British point of view, being an elite coach, if you're dealing with foreign owners, foreign directors, foreign chief executives and a foreign director football, you're rarely going to get a chance. That's the downside. The upside is it's brought millions and millions and millions into the game. But if you're trying to be an elite coach in England, as an Englishman, it’s more difficult than anywhere else."