[ad_1]
The Welsh club lost its fight to stay in the top of the table after being beaten 3-2 at home by Crystal Palace
Neil Warnock does not know he will stay in Cardiff after his Premier League relegation.
At age 70, the young man does not intend to retire, but he will "let the dust fall" before talking with the owner of the Bluebirds Vincent Tan, and the president, Mehmet Dalman, about his future at the club.
"I think we just (rest) for a few days and think about everything," said Warnock, after the defeat against Crystal Palace, which has plunged his team down.
"I have to let things go and do nothing foolhardy. I did not talk to anyone. You can not make reckless judging at this point of the season with a match to play.
"Mehmet has been great to me, so I'm sure we 'll have a discussion, whether it' s today, this weekend, or in the next few weeks.
"I will work next year, I will have a year somewhere. I am looking forward to this challenge now. "
Talking about SPORT after the dramatic 3-2 home defeat at Palace, Warnock praised his team's efforts as he said the season was the best of his 40 years of management.
Reduced by many after their surprise promotion of the Championship, Cardiff bravely fought against all odds and had to face the tragic death of the signing of the Emiliano Sala record.
"When I arrived at the club, it was in a difficult situation, it was a little ripped. Now we have united the club and we are alive, "said Warnock.
"I bet there was never a relegated team where fans made so much noise after the match. They are incredible fans, they have been all season, and I am very proud to handle them.
"It's my 40th year in management and I think it's one of the best – if not the best – seasons I've ever had in management with what I've had to go through and still be as beautiful as me. "
Warnock refuses to be discreet about Cardiff's relegation and says that Sala's tragic death puts everything in perspective.
"I have 40 years of experience in management and you have more or less seen everything that could be launched, but it came out of the sky," he said.
"It puts things in perspective. We were relegated but the boy lost his life. We are disappointed but we can go back.
"Emiliano, I spent two months looking for him and I said to him, 'we are going to create opportunities and you will score them' because I'm sure he would have succeeded.
I thought ten goals in the second half of the season with him would have definitely put us safe.
"It was a blow at a time when we could not really go out and find other people.
"I do not think I realized at that moment emotionally how much it took me because it was the case. It was a very, very difficult time. "
[ad_2]
Source link