sport news Gareth Southgate will not make SNAP decision on his England future and will ... trends now Gareth Southgate will not make a snap decision on his England future and insists he'll 'take some time' to make sure 'the right decisions' are made while claiming the Three Lions 'deserved more' during their 2-1 loss to France By Ed Carruthers For Mailonline and Pa Sport Staff Published: 22:29 GMT, 10 December 2022 | Updated: 22:31 GMT, 10 December 2022 Viewcomments Gareth Southgate will not make a snap decision on his future as the England men's national side coach following England's heartbreak exit from the 2022 World Cup. Harry Kane scored a penalty during the match but missed a second, while goals from Aurelien Tchouameni and Olivier Giroud saw the world champions defeat England on Saturday night to progress into the semi-finals of the tournament. Southgate's contract with the Three Lions will run until December 2024, and with many suitors from domestic leagues around Europe chasing his signature his plans for the future have been left for much debate. Gareth Southgate (pictured) will not make a snap decision on his future as England manager England were knocked out of the 2022 World Cup after losing 2-1 to France Yet it appears Southgate won't be making any calls on his future any time soon, with England back in action next March as they bid to qualify for Euro 2024. "I think after every tournament we have sat and reviewed and reflected," he said to ITV. "It needs a bit of time to make sure everybody makes the right decisions." England fought back from Tchouameni's early strike to deservedly level through Kane's first spot-kick, which saw him equal Wayne Rooney's national team record of 53 goals. Olivier Giroud headed France back in front before Kane was handed another chance to equalise, only to blast his penalty high over Tottenham team-mate Hugo Lloris' crossbar. Southgate was proud of his side's performance and felt they were good enough to have gone all the way in the tournament. "I think the performance did (deserve more), but in the end goals are decisive," he said, "I don't think they could have given any more. They have played really well against a top team. "I think we were here to win the tournament and we had belief we could. "I think we showed in our performance against the reigning champions we have a team good enough to have done that." Share or comment on this article: All rights reserved for this news site (dailymail) and under his responsibility