Swansea City are close to revealing Michael Laudrup as their new manager.
The Swans hope to name the former Real Madrid, Barcelona and Denmark playmaker as Brendan Rodgers's successor over the weekend.
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Michael Laudrup scores for Denmark
Laudrup scores against Spain
Swansea chairman Huw Jenkins, who is meeting with club staff at the Liberty Stadium, is in talks with the former Real Mallorca and Spartak Moscow boss.
It is thought Laudrup's style is in keeping with the playing philosophy that Jenkins is keen to retain.
The 47-year-old has previously spoken of his desire to manage in the Premier League.
Swansea, who finished 11th in their debut Premier League season, are searching for their fourth boss in three years afterRodgers accepted the Liverpool vacancy last month.
Blackpool boss Ian Holloway was the other leading candidate for the role, although the Seasiders have denied receiving any approach for the 49-year-old.
Former France captain Marcel Desailly, Wigan assistant and ex-Swansea number two Graeme Jones and Brighton and Hove Albion boss Gus Poyet had also been linked with the job.

Michael Laudrup Fact File

Michael Laudrup
  • Born: 15 June, 1964 in Frederiksberg, Denmark
  • International honours: 104 caps & 37 goals for Denmark
  • Managerial career: Denmark (assistant manager), Brondby, Getafe, Spartak Moscow, Real Mallorca
  • Playing career: KB, Brondby, Juventus, Lazio (loan), Barcelona, Real Madrid, Vissel Kobe, Ajax
  • Individual honours: Best foreign player in Spanish football the last 25 years (1999), Denmark's best player ever (2006)
  • Did you know?: Laudrup is the only player to win the Spanish league five times in a row playing for two different clubs Real Madrid and Barcelona. Laudrup also won league titles with Juventus and Ajax.
Laudrup, who won five Spanish league titles with Barcelona and Real Madrid as a player between 1991 and 1995, played a style of attractive, passing football that would suit Swansea's philosophy.
He has been out of work since resigning as Mallorca manager, where he was in charge for 14 months, in September 2011 after the club sacked his assistant Erik Larsen.
Laudrup retired from playing while at Dutch giants Ajax and started his coaching career aged 36 as Denmark coach Morten Olsen's assistant in 2000.
He helped inspire the Danish team to win their 2002 World Cup pool, which included Uruguay, Senegal and reigning champions France, before they were beaten 3-0 by England in Niigata.
Laudrup took the manager's job at Danish side Brondby after the World Cup in South Korea and Japan and he guided the side to the 2005 league and cup double with a young squad playing an attractive short-passing game, similar to Swansea's brand.
He was linked with a managerial vacancy at former club Real Madrid when he left Brondby in 2006 before Laudrup joined Spanish side Getafe, who he guided to the 2008 Spanish Cup final and the Uefa Cup quarter-final.
Laudrup was reportedly a contender for jobs at Valencia, Benfica, Chelsea, Blackburn Rovers and West Ham United when he resigned as Getafe boss in May 2008 but took over at Spartak Moscow in September 2008.
He was dismissed seven months later following their Russian Cup loss to Dynamo Moscow and was heavily linked with Spanish side Atletico Madrid but Laudrup and the club were unable to agree terms.
He was appointed Mallorca manager in July 2010 and kept a struggling team in Spain's La Liga but left the club citing frustration in his working relationship with director of football Lorenzo Serra Ferrer.
Jenkins has a reputation for appointing and developing young managers who share his football philosophy to ensure squad stability.
The subsequent departures of Martinez to Wigan, Paulo Sousa to Leicester and Rodgers to Liverpool have earned Swansea almost £10m in total compensation.