The Borneo Post

Swansea boss Carvalhal fishing for ‘sardines’ in transfer window

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SWANSEA, Wales: Swansea boss Carlos Carvalhal is confident he will be given funds to strengthen his squad in the January transfer window but reckoned he may have to settle for “sardines” rather than “lobsters or seabass”.

The Portuguese manager, who replaced the sacked Paul Clement last month, said he met the club’s chairman Huw Jenkins over recruitmen­t following Swansea’s 2- 0 loss to Tottenham Hotspur in the Premier League on Tuesday.

“We have money for sardines and I’m thinking lobster,” Carvalhal told reporters ahead of Swansea’s FA Cup third round trip to Wolverhamp­ton Wanderers on Saturday. “I will do my best to try and bring in the best players. I will look to the lobsters and sea bass, but if not we must buy sardines. But sometimes the sardines can win games.

“There are limits. I understand this is a responsibl­e club and they don’t want to create a problem for the club in the future.”

Swansea sold their key attacking players Gylfi Sigurdsson and Fernando Llorente at the start of the campaign but have failed to replace them adequately.

With the club rooted to the bottom of the league, Carvalhal accepts it could be difficult attract to quality players willing to contribute in a relegation battle.

“Not all players would come to a team that’s fighting like us to stay in the competitio­n. We need cover in positions, the chairman knows this and we must check players. I cannot tell you the names of the players because it is a principle of mine not to talk about players not in my squad.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? Confederat­ion of African Football (CAF) president Ahmad Ahmad presents The African Footballer of the Year Award to Egypt and Liverpool striker Mohamed Salah during an award ceremony at the Internatio­nal Conference Centre in Accra. — AFP photo
Confederat­ion of African Football (CAF) president Ahmad Ahmad presents The African Footballer of the Year Award to Egypt and Liverpool striker Mohamed Salah during an award ceremony at the Internatio­nal Conference Centre in Accra. — AFP photo

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