Steven Gerrard has already laid out his conditions for taking a managerial job, with rumours of Middlesbrough interest re-emerging.With Rob Edwards leaving Middlesbrough for Wolves just four months after arriving at the Riverside, Middlesbrough are again looking for a manager.While Gerrard was ruled out as a candidate in the summer, it stands to reason that he could now be in the frame again, as rumours suggest.As of yet, no reliable sources have linked Gerrard to the new vacancy in the north east. However, having recently turned down the Rangers job, he could be an ideal fit for Middlesbrough.With the Teesiders currently second in the Championship, they would fit with Gerrard’s claim that he only wants to join a team “that’s going to compete to win.” Gerrard’s managerial career has taken an unusual path so far.After working as an under-18s coach at Liverpool, he went to Rangers where he stopped Celtic from winning 10 league titles in a row and wrote himself into the Ibrox history books.From there, he took the manager’s job at Aston Villa but lasted less than a year before being removed from his post.A stint in Saudi Arabia with Al-Ettifaq followed but that was never competitive enough to suit Gerrard.Now he is back home and wants another bite of the managerial cherry. He told Rio Ferdinand Presents: “I’d love another go at some point.“I want to change a few things and improve a few things and come back fresh, with a few different people around myself.“I’d love another couple of challenges doing this and that’s what I’m working on in the background at the moment – a few different ideas, a few different people around me. “I know where I’m strong and I know there’s areas where I need good support, and I need special skill sets to make me better and stronger, in terms of my staff and my group.“I felt like I had that to a tee at Rangers [with Gary McAllister and Michael Beale].“A lot of coach changes at Aston Villa and over in Saudi – I don’t think helped me from a personal point of view.”“So, now I’m enjoying family time and doing a lot of things that I haven’t been able to do, like going to Grand Prix and doing exhibition games with ex-teammates and superstars.“But there’s a part of me that still feels that there’s a bit of unfinished business, in terms of wanting to go in and face another couple of exciting challenges.“I want a certain type of challenge – if, in an ideal world, they become available, I’ll jump at them. If they don’t, I won’t go back in.“I want to be at a team that’s going to compete to win because I think that suits me better.”