Crystal Palace have appointed former England boss Sam Allardyce as manager on a two-and-a-half-year deal, a day after sacking Alan Pardew.
Pardew was sacked on Thursday with the club seventeenth in the Premier League after a keep running of one win in 11 diversions.Director Steve Parish said the club was "lucky that somebody of Sam's bore and experience was accessible".
Allardyce has been out of work since losing the England work following 67 days, in the wake of a daily paper sting.
The 62-year-old will take preparing on Saturday, before Palace's Boxing Day diversion at Watford.
"You for the most part land another position in light of the fact that there are troubles at a club," Allardyce told Crystal Palace's site.
"I need to deal with those troubles, ideally with my experience, and attempt to get a couple of more outcomes on the board, especially over Christmas and New Year, to make everyone feel more great."
Subsequent to expelling Pardew on Thursday, Parish said his "far reaching style of football hasn't worked" and told BBC Sport the club would now "wind the dial back the other way".
Area, who co-claims the club with American financial specialists Josh Harris and David Blitzer, said transfer is "costly to the point" that a change was required.
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