Sunderland Echo

COLEMAN SHORT ON CONVERSATI­ON

SUNDERLAND BOSS STILL HASN’T SPOKEN TO AMERICAN OWNER

-

Manager Chris Coleman has opened up about the impact the uncertaint­y hanging over Sunderland is having on summer recruitmen­t plans,

Sunderland are on the brink of being relegated to League One and could go down as early as this weekend if they drop points at home to relegation rivals Burton Albion at the Stadium of Light tomorrow (KO 3pm).

Successive relegation­s would be devastatin­g for the Black Cats, with the uncertaint­y surroundin­g takeover talk ongoing in the background.

Owner Ellis Short is looking to offload the club and, while no deal is thought to be close, it leaves Coleman, who has already stressed his desire to stay at the club, and his backroom team planning for all eventualit­ies.

When asked if there has been any further communicat­ion regarding ownership issues, Coleman – still yet to speak with Short – said: “Same answer. There has been no dialogue from the chairman. We are planning on different levels in terms of who we need to bring to the club.

“Just in case we are told it is A, so at least we are a little bit ahead of the game, or B so we have that in plan or C, we have that going on, which is not ideal. That is where we are.

“That is the hardest part, we are working on certain things were we know we might be wasting our time if it doesn’t go that way.

“But if there is a chance it goes that way and we haven’t done any due diligence or planning, we would be behind schedule.

“We have to make sure, as best we can, to prepare down the line were we are playing from, the league and the budget, just in case.

“If we wait another month or three weeks, whatever, it could be longer than that, the club is sold or not sold, we are in this league or that league, then we are behind everyone else.

“It is a lot of work at the moment. We are shooting off in different directions in case – that is what we are working off. It is work that needs to be done.”

Coleman has stressed his desire to remain on Wearside next season and rebuild the club, even if that meant managing in the third tier.

He added: “It will turn, sooner or later. Big clubs have been in our position and it will turn.

“I would be jealous if somebody came in after me and it started moving forward. I have seen the difficult stuff, we are going through it now.

“I’d like to be here when it does turn.

“At the minute, it’s impossible to gauge who is going to be here in this seat and who is going to be sat down there in the dressing room because the uncertaint­y here is substantia­l.”

 ??  ?? Sunderland boss Chris Coleman.
Sunderland boss Chris Coleman.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom