STEVE McClaren could be just 90 minutes from the sack as England manager.

And today we are asking you to tell us whether he should go or be given more time.

A run of disappointing results and performances have raised the pressure on McClaren to fever pitch.

If England fail to beat the minnows of Andorra tomorrow night, England's hopes of qualification will be the same as McClaren's chances of keeping his job - non-existent.

But should the former Middlesbrough boss be shown the red card anyway?

The country's media and pundits are having their say on football's great debate, and we want to find out what the people of Bolton think.

You can have your say by taking part in our online vote.

Simply log on to our website and cast your vote. We will publish the result on Wednesday.

Or you can join our online debate by adding your comments to our website stories on England.

McClaren is only eight games into his tenure and has found out quicker than most of his predecessors how intense and relentless the pressure can be as the manager of the international football team.

The nation demands that its players fulfil their potential when they pull on the Three Lions, and they have failed to do that on a consistent basis under McClaren.

It could be said that the team has been like his hairline - strong at the back, not much up front and a few problems in the middle.

The FA knows it may have to act quickly as it cannot afford for England to fail in their bid to qualify for next year's European Championship Finals.

Soho Square says it will cost English football £100million if England are not competing in Austria and Switzerland in the summer of 2008, which makes the £2.5million they would have to pay McClaren if they sacked him look like a pittance.

Despite the brief time he has been in the job, the damage which has been done will take a huge effort to rectify.

England are floundering badly in their qualifying group, after drawing with Israel and Macedonia and losing to Croatia.

Just as bad as those results were the performances, in particular the impotence up front where England have failed to score a single goal and Wayne Rooney has looked a pale shadow of the player he was before McClaren took charge.

England cannot afford any more of McClaren's failure. But can the country trust him to come good?