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Swansea City set to appoint Paul Clement as new manager - reports

Swansea are set to appoint Paul Clement as their new manager, according to multiple reports following the Premier League club's 3-0 home loss to Bournemouth on Saturday.

Clement, the former Derby County boss and currently a Bayern Munich assistant, has been in talks with Swansea over the last 24 hours to become the club's third manager of the season.

Reports said the deal could be finalised over the next 48 hours before Swansea -- who will head into 2017 bottom of the Premier League -- visit Crystal Palace on Tuesday.

Swansea sacked Bob Bradley, who succeeded Francesco Guidolin in October, after just 85 days in charge after the 4-1 Boxing Day defeat to West Ham.

Clement emerged as the favourite to succeed Bradley after top target Chris Coleman, the Wales manager, appeared to close the door on making an emotional return to his hometown club.

Clement was interviewed for the position when Bradley was appointed, and the Swansea hierarchy were impressed enough with the 44-year-old to return to him after sacking the American on Tuesday.

He has an excellent reputation as a coach having worked as Carlo Ancelotti's assistant at Chelsea, Paris St Germain, Real Madrid and Bayern. But his only job in management at Derby lasted just eight months before he was surprisingly sacked in February 2016.

Derby were fifth in the Championship at the time, having been top of the table on Boxing Day. Club owner Mel Morris said he was unhappy with the team's style of play and sacked Clement after the Rams had gone seven games without a win.

Clement's managerial skills will certainly be tested in south Wales as Swansea face a huge task to avoid relegation. Bournemouth's win at the Liberty Stadium on Saturday leaves them bottom with 12 points at the halfway stage of the campaign.

Caretaker boss Alan Curtis oversaw a fourth straight league defeat and says confidence is so low that it will be difficult for the new manager to spark a recovery.

"It showed today it's going to be very difficult," Curtis said. "But I believe -- naively or not -- that there should be enough there to get better results.

"I think the first goal is crucial for us because once we concede the confidence drains from us. Confidence in sport, especially football, is a fragile thing.

"There's no explanation apart from we're bottom of the table, not winning games, conceding too many. Maybe if we had not conceded the second and gone in at 1-0 we could have reorganised. But Bournemouth did to us what we used to do to teams."