Chris Coleman admits Sunderland regret and what he didn't like about Netflix involvement
Mikel Arteta reviews Spurs defeat
Conor McGregor drops out of richest athletes list after being No.1 last year
Man Utd's worst ever Premier League season
Wayne Rooney reacts to Derby relegation
Aguero welcomes Haaland to Man City
Martyn Ford floors Iranian Hulk during face-off
Mickelson signs up for controversial LIV Golf Invitational
Chris Coleman has admitted he has never watched the Netflix series 'Sunderland 'Til I Die' because it would be "too painful" for him to view.
The Welshman was manager of the Wearsiders from November 2017 to April 2018 and oversaw their drop from the Championship. It was a second successive relegation that pushed the Black Cats into the third tier of English football for only the second time in their history.
Four years later the club are still residing in unfamiliar territory but are hopeful of ending the unhappy stay as they compete in next week's League One play-off final against Wycombe Wanderers. It has been a long road to get to that Wembley final, and whilst Coleman inherited a troubled club upon taking the job he says the fact he was unable to prevent relegation still hurts him alot.
Speaking to the i, the 51-year-old said: "It was an honour to be asked to go to Sunderland. I'm a football person, I know there's certain clubs - they have the history, supporters, the potential. When it came up even though they were bottom of the league I just thought, 'I'm not going to turn that down'. They've got such potential. It's the biggest regret of my career because we got relegated and that was unthinkable. It was so frustrating because we were helpless a little bit."
Coleman, now managing in the Greek Super League with Atromitos, also spoke about the Netflix series. He featured