Gary Neville is expected to return to Sky Sports as a football pundit next season.

The word within the England party in France is that their assistant coach will accept Sky’s open-ended invitation to come back after the team’s involvement in Euro 2016 is over.

Neville left Sky last season after forging a reputation as the game’s best analyst to try his hand at management with Valencia. But he had a nightmare, winning only 10 out of 28 games in a four-month spell before his inevitable sacking.

Gary Neville is expected to return to Sky Sports alongside Jamie Carragher and new presenter Dave Jones

England assistant coach will accept Sky’s invitation to come back after the team’s involvement in Euro 2016

Neville has concentrated on his part-time role with England since then along with his varied business interests that include co-ownership of non-League Salford and Hotel Football next door to Old Trafford. Sky will welcome him back with open arms, having not directly replaced him since he left last December.

He would easily slip back into his role, especially alongside Jamie Carragher on Monday Night Football, on which their dissection of the weekend’s Premier League games took football punditry to new heights. The main change is that Neville will be working with a new presenter in Dave Jones, with Ed Chamberlin going to ITV.

Meanwhile, a TV army is converging on Lens for England v Wales. BBC Wales alone have 83 accredited personnel, with the English BBC operation having a similar number — and that was before the hooligan trouble added to the TV presence. At Tuesday’s TV press conference questions from BBC News, BBC Sport and BBC Wales didn’t allow many others to get a word in, apart from Sky Sports News, who showed it live.

Wales and Real Madrid forward Gareth Bale answers questions during a press conference on Tuesday

Wayne Rooney’s long-time agent Paul Stretford is always there to close-mark the family during major tournaments.

So much so that he has left the main English media hotel in Chantilly to move into more upmarket accommodation where Coleen and the rest of the Rooney clan are staying.

Wayne Rooney's long-time agent Paul Stretford is staying close during the European Championship

Premier League champions Leicester may have a very different side by the start of next season if they keep their £80,000-a-week wage limit.

Despite reports this week that they are finally prepared to offer Riyad Mahrez £100,000 a week, it is understood the salary pinch imposed by the owners is agitating the club’s marquee players, including Mahrez, Jamie Vardy, Danny Drinkwater, Kasper Schmeichel and N’Golo Kante.

Leicester's £80,000-a-week wage limit could see the likes of Riyad Mahrez (left) and Jamie Vardy (right) depart

FA stopped having specific staff looking after the England WAGS at tournaments following the circus in Baden-Baden in 2006.

But, fortunately in the wake of the hooligan concerns, the FA have set up a private website which the players’ families and friends can access to receive the latest information on all team matters — except the line-up.

Wales show the way

Wales and Slovakia fans shouldn’t add to the massive security concerns surrounding the matches in Lille and Lens if the conduct around their opening Group B match at Euro 2016 is anything to go by.

The two sets of supporters got on so well they played a mass football match against each other in Bordeaux’s main square after the Welsh victory last Saturday.

And Wales’s open approach to the media, in contrast to England players’ scripted appearances, saw superstar Gareth Bale put up for interview and then stay to applaud his team-mate Aaron Ramsey off the stage.

Wales and Slovakia supporters arrive prior to their Euro 2016 Group B clash at the Stade de Bordeaux

Adam Lallana was one of the outstanding England players against Russia. But his parents have hired a camper van to travel to the games, searching for camp sites along the way.

They didn’t want to book hotels as they were not sure he would make the squad, let alone be assured of his place in the starting XI.

FIFA’s ever-confusing reform process now includes Fatma Samoura, president Gianni Infantino’s surprise choice to be secretary general, passing an eligibility check.

It was conducted by three independent parties — Miguel Maduro, former advocate general of the European Court of Justice, retired Indian High Court judge Mukul Mudgal and Felipe Salaverry, a former president of Peruvian club Sporting Cristal.

FIFA say the expected integrity probe into Samoura’s suitability for the post was wrapped up in the eligibility investigation.