Rafa Benitez is eagerly anticipating potential job offers from the Premier League this season and is prepared to consider offers at all levels. He understands the competitive nature of the league and is willing to start at a lower level if necessary.
Benitez first arrived in England in 2004 with Liverpool, guiding them to the Champions League in his first season at the club and taking them close to repeating that triumph two years later.
Unpopular spells at Chelsea and Everton sat either side of a more respected stint as Newcastle United boss, interspersed with jobs abroad including Inter, Napoli, Real Madrid and most recently Celta Vigo.
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Rafa Benitez reveals he has turned down Premier League offers in the past but is now open to suggestion
Benitez is aware that he is unlikely to get a job at one of the Premier League's big clubs at this stage of his managerial career, but says he would need to 'make a decision' if a club further down the league wanted his services.
Speaking on the Stick to Football podcast, brought to you by Sky Bet, Benitez said: “I’m thinking about taking a job in the Premier League. That is not easy because I had offers – trust me, I had five or six offers from teams at the bottom of the table.
“I am realistic. I have the passion, I have the knowledge, I have the experience so I can make a difference. And the methodology, I like to be on the pitch coaching players and improving players, little things.
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"Anthony Gordon is one of the examples, so we can improve players and make things happen.
“But, there are not too many [job offers at the top of the table]. Manchester United will not come for me, Chelsea will not come for me.
"So, there are teams that I will not coach because they will not come for me. Then, the teams at the middle of the table, bottom of the table, they start firing managers and then you have to make a decision.
"I want to coach in the Premier League, and then this team at the bottom of the table is coming with a project.”
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