Warnock calls the last week the 'most difficult' of his career amid Sala search

Warnock calls the last week the 'most difficult' of his career amid Sala search

Neil Warnock admits he has questioned his own future as Cardiff manager following the disappearance of the plane carrying the club's striker Emiliano Sala over the Channel Islands last Monday.

Sala, who was signed by Cardiff for a club-record £15million from French club Nantes only two days earlier, and pilot David Ibbotson remain missing, with fundraisers having paid for a private search in the English Channel after the official search was called off last Thursday.

"You think 24 hours a day about whether to carry on," Warnock said as he spoke to the media for the first time on Monday following Sala's disappearance.

Neil Warnock has reflected on an awful week
Neil Warnock has reflected on an awful week (Richard Sellers/PA)

"It's impossible to sleep. I've been in football management for 40 years and it's been by far the most difficult week in my career, by an absolute mile.

"It's been a traumatic week and even now I can't get my head around the situation.

"It's probably hit me me harder than anyone else as I've met the lad and talked to him for the last six to eight weeks."

Fans everywhere have supported the search
Fans everywhere have supported the search (Richard Sellers/PA)

Warnock revealed that the League Managers' Association had offered him support and that several Cardiff players had spoken to psychologists in the wake of Sala's disappearance.

Asked whether he had sought help, Warnock said: "You have to in this instance. Who motivates the motivator?

"I am OK when I'm in the public eye or with the players, it's when I'm at I'm on my own or at home that you think about it.

"It'a probably the lads you don't expect that needed more help. But I don't think it does any harm to talk to anyone else. It's been noticeable that three of four lads have been really poor."

Emiliano Sala's mother Mercedes (centre) and sister Romina (right) arrive back at Guernsey airport
Emiliano Sala's mother Mercedes (centre) and sister Romina (right) arrive back at Guernsey airport (Joe Giddens/PA)

Warnock said he backed the Sala family's determination for the search to be resumed, with more than £290,000 raised through gofundme donations.

"I quite understand (sister) Romina's stance," Warnock said.

"If it was my kid, I'd want everybody looking at it forever. It's such a strange situation, everybody is hoping like the family.

"Football is important, relegation and things are important, but in the context of life, it just opens everybody's eyes, whether you are involved with Cardiff or any of the families."

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