BLACKBURN chairman John Williams insists they will not be rushed into naming a replacement for Mark Hughes as Alan Shearer emerged as a popular choice among supporters.
The former Rovers striker came top of a newspaper poll as to who should be the new manager.
Local radio stations have also been inundated with calls championing Shearer's credentials.
But, on the day Hughes took over at Manchester City, Williams said: "If you are going to lose you manager this is the time to do it.
"There is still five weeks before the players return so we have some time to make the right appointment.
"We want to do it as quickly as possible but not this is not something you do with undue haste.
"We are an example to those who preach that in the Premier League there is nothing better for a club than stability, and that stability equals success.
"We have only changed manager once in eight years - four years of Graeme Souness followed by four years of Mark Hughes. That kind of stability has worked for us. Now we have to make the third one as good." Shearer won a place in the supporters' hearts by helping the club win the Premier League title in 1995.
He scored 130 goals in 171 appearances before joining his beloved Newcastle a year later for £15million.
In a poll conducted on the Blackburn-based Lancashire Telegraph website, Shearer was the fans' overwhelming favourite to succeed Hughes.
He got 46% of the vote - nearly three times as much as his nearest challenger Paul Ince, the boss of MK Dons.
Only 13% wanted the former Newcastle and Bolton manager Sam Allardyce, and just 3% would welcome the appointment of Steve McClaren, who has been out of work since he was sacked by England last year.
Shearer has repeatedly been questioned about his management ambitions, and while he has admitted he wants to return to football one day, he has remained non-committal about exactly when.
He still has two years to run on his contract with the BBC and will be part of their team covering Euro 2008 in Austria and Switzerland.
Shearer appears to be in no immediate rush to return to the game despite being offered a role at St James' Park by manager Kevin Keegan.
In November, the former England striker told PA Sport: "I would not have spent three years doing my A Licence and my B Licence if I did not think I would need them at some stage in my career or in my life.
"It does interest me, but when that time will be, I really could not really tell you.
"I am happy in what I am doing, but if I got to 50 or 55 and I had not given it a go, I think there would be something missing.
"When that time will be, your guess is as good as mine."
Local radio stations have also been inundated with calls championing Shearer's credentials.
But, on the day Hughes took over at Manchester City, Williams said: "If you are going to lose you manager this is the time to do it.
"There is still five weeks before the players return so we have some time to make the right appointment.
"We want to do it as quickly as possible but not this is not something you do with undue haste.
"We are an example to those who preach that in the Premier League there is nothing better for a club than stability, and that stability equals success.
"We have only changed manager once in eight years - four years of Graeme Souness followed by four years of Mark Hughes. That kind of stability has worked for us. Now we have to make the third one as good." Shearer won a place in the supporters' hearts by helping the club win the Premier League title in 1995.
He scored 130 goals in 171 appearances before joining his beloved Newcastle a year later for £15million.
In a poll conducted on the Blackburn-based Lancashire Telegraph website, Shearer was the fans' overwhelming favourite to succeed Hughes.
He got 46% of the vote - nearly three times as much as his nearest challenger Paul Ince, the boss of MK Dons.
Only 13% wanted the former Newcastle and Bolton manager Sam Allardyce, and just 3% would welcome the appointment of Steve McClaren, who has been out of work since he was sacked by England last year.
Shearer has repeatedly been questioned about his management ambitions, and while he has admitted he wants to return to football one day, he has remained non-committal about exactly when.
He still has two years to run on his contract with the BBC and will be part of their team covering Euro 2008 in Austria and Switzerland.
Shearer appears to be in no immediate rush to return to the game despite being offered a role at St James' Park by manager Kevin Keegan.
In November, the former England striker told PA Sport: "I would not have spent three years doing my A Licence and my B Licence if I did not think I would need them at some stage in my career or in my life.
"It does interest me, but when that time will be, I really could not really tell you.
"I am happy in what I am doing, but if I got to 50 or 55 and I had not given it a go, I think there would be something missing.
"When that time will be, your guess is as good as mine."
Copyright (c) Press Association
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