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Scott McGarvey: 'Sam Allardyce exit was over-reaction'

Football agent Scott McGarvey insists Sam Allardyce losing his job as England manager over the Daily Telegraph sting was an over-reaction by the Football Association.

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Allardyce's reign as Three Lions boss lasted just 67 days after undercover journalists posing as businessmen filmed him arranging to earn extra money by doing motivational speeches for a bogus Far East firm.

The former West Ham and Sunderland boss was also caught on camera mocking Roy Hodgson, revealing how to bypass FA transfer rules and criticising his employers and as a result he lost his job after both parties agreed he could not carry on.

Allardyce attended the meeting at a hotel in London after it was arranged by one-time Wolves loanee McGarvey, who admits that Allardyce should hold him responsible for how events unfolded.

Asked on Sky Sports News how he felt about Allardyce losing his job, he said: "Very surprised. I'm devastated for him. I can't think of anything worse that could have happened.

"He's got to feel I'm responsible because I'm the one who's brought him to the meeting but he's only come for me.

"He's never once spoken about money. He's never once said anything about money. It was only, 'Are you okay, lad? I'll help you'.

"Do I think he holds me responsible? I think he's known me for a long, long time. He knows that I'd never do that to him or to anybody in football.

"I can understand if he doesn't speak to me again. I need to respect that, but I hope not because we go back a long way.

"It might take a bit of time because I know how hurt he is at losing the England job.

"It doesn't matter if you're the manager of Crewe and you lose your job but if you're the manager of England and you lose your job after one game, it's a joke."

McGarvey, who is also implicated in similar stings on QPR manager Jimmy Floyd Hasselbaink and Southampton assistant Eric Black, insists that they were entrapped with a "capital E" by the national newspaper.

He also claims that when he first started talking to the undercover journalists, Allardyce was still at Sunderland.

"Capital E. Absolutely. One hundred per cent," he added. "This is not Monday to Friday. This is 13 weeks of dozens of emails, hundreds of texts, hundreds of calls and bringing more than seven or eight innocent people into this story.

"He (Allardyce) only came for me. A hundred per cent for me. When I told him I had this opportunity. I phoned him up and said I had the chance of getting this job and it looked very good and they were looking for someone to do motivational speaking.

"The key to this is, I spoke to Sam when he was Sunderland manager, he wasn't the England manager.

"The first meeting I had with them, Sam was Sunderland manager. I assumed it would be motivational speaking in the off season.

"That was all it was about. I phoned Sam and he said, 'Would it help you?' I said it would definitely help and he said, 'Go on, lad. No problem'. That was it."

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