Sport
Family and fitness the priority for Bale as he weighs up options ahead of World Cup
Gareth Bale has said that family and fitness for the World Cup will be his main priorities as he decides where to play club football following his departure from Real Madrid.
He also handed Cardiff a boost by suggesting the standard of football he plays before the World Cup does not make âtoo much of a differenceâ.
The 32-year-old has been linked with Premier League outfit Newcastle and MLS teams in the United States ahead of Wales playing at the World Cup in Qatar this November.
But Cardiff has also emerged as a potential destination, despite the Bluebirds playing in the Sky Bet Championship.
Baleâs agent Jonathan Barnett revealed in a recent interview that âwhat Gareth does next is not about moneyâ, while Wales manager Robert Page said the idea of his captain joining Cardiff âticks all the boxesâ and âmakes a lot of senseâ.
âItâs something I guess I need to sit down and go through,â Bale said on his future ahead of Walesâ Nations League tie in Holland on Tuesday.
âNot just with my family, but with the manager here (Page), with the physios here that we use, to see what would give me the best chance of being fit come November and December.
âI donât really know if the standard makes too much of a difference. A football game is a football game.
âI feel like Iâll never really lose my quality on the ball. I guess itâs a conversation to be had.
âI need time to think whatâs the best move for me, my family, my kids, and hopefully weâll sort that over the summer. I have options.â
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'Fit as I can'
Bale made just four starts for Real in his final injury-hit campaign in Madrid.
He has started two of Walesâ four games this month, the World Cup play-off victory over Ukraine and Saturdayâs 1-1 Nations League draw against Belgium.
But he did not complete 90 minutes in either match, and he knows the importance of game-time and being fully fit before the World Cup.
Bale said: âIdeally I would have had more games coming in (to camp) so I would have been even fitter and not had to recover as much as I am at the moment.
âIâve been available for quite a lot of the games in Spain, sometimes you just donât get picked so people assume that youâre injured.
âIt (next step) is going to be massively important. I need to make sure Iâm playing games and Iâm as fit as possible.
âSometimes Iâm able to get away with it, but ideally I want to go into a World Cup playing games and being as fit for as long as I can on the pitch.â
'Guide'
Wales produced an impressive performance against Belgium, ranked second in the world, to claim their first top-tier Nations League point on Saturday.
But injuries have hit them hard ahead of their trip to Rotterdamâs Feyenoord Stadium.
Danny Ward, Joe Allen, Joe Morrell and Neco Williams have joined Kieffer Moore on the slidelines. Rhys Norrington-Davies is suspended.
âItâs been a long camp and the only goal was to qualify for the World Cup,â said Bale, with Wales seeking to avenge last Wednesdayâs 2-1 home defeat to Holland.
âWe did that, which was history made. In terms of the Nations League itâs been difficult to prepare for.
âThe first game was pretty much get through it and after that it was mainly trying to recover.
âThere was a lot of mental and physical stress but I guess, with Belgium, it was good to get a point against such a good team.
âWe have a lot of good young players coming through and itâs our responsibility to guide them, to keep that character and togetherness up.â
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