Southampton are set to part ways with manager Ivan Juric following relegation from the Premier League on Sunday.
The south coast club are yet to make an official announcement but sources have told BBC Sport that Juric's departure will be confirmed later today.
Juric was appointed as Russell Martin's successor on an 18-month deal in December but has won just two of his 16 matches.
Sunday's 3-1 defeat at Tottenham consigned the rock-bottom Saints to the earliest relegation in Premier League history with eight games still to play.
The loss against Spurs was Southampton's 25th of the season in the league.
Simon Rusk is expected to step in as interim manager with Adam Lallana acting as his assistant.
Rooted to the bottom of the standings on 10 points, Southampton require two further points to avoid beating Derby County's record-low tally of 11, achieved in 2007-08.
Juric arrived at Southampton having been sacked by Roma in November after only 12 games in charge of the Serie A club.
The 49-year-old has previously held roles in Italy with Torino, Hellas Verona, Genoa, Crotone and Mantova.
Southampton won promotion to the Premier League last summer after beating Leeds in the play-offs, however, their campaign in the top flight has been troubled from the outset.
Saints lost eight of their opening nine games, and their 1-0 win against Everton on 2 November was their only victory in their opening 23 league fixtures.
Juric, who had no previous experience in English football, was unable to inspire the squad after replacing Martin in the dugout, losing each of his first six games.
Southampton sat nine points adrift of safety when Juric walked through the doors, but Sunday's loss against Spurs left them 22 points shy of 17th-placed Wolves.
They are only the third team to lose as many as 25 of their first 31 games of a top-flight campaign, after Sunderland in 2005-06 and Sheffield United in 2020-21 (both also 25).
Southampton have conceded the most goals in the league (74) by far, and are the lowest scorers in the top four divisions of English football (23 goals in 31 games).
No team has ever had fewer points in the Premier League after 31 games (10), although Sunderland in 2005-06 & Derby in 2007-08 had the same tally too.