Zola questions his own ability to save West Ham from the drop

West Ham boss Gianfranco Zola admitted last night he has had doubts over his ability to save the club from relegation.   The rookie manager has found the job at Upton Park much tougher than he expected when he arrived to replace Alan Curbishley last season.  West Ham head to Aston Villa on Sunday just one place outside the relegation zone and with uncertainty hanging in the air as the debt-ridden club attempt to find a new owner.  Self-critical: Gianfranco Zola has found the Upton Park job tough going Zola's own future remains unclear following reports in Italy that he will be sacked if one of the interested parties, the Cagliari president Massimo Cellini, succeeds with his £100million bid.   Despite all that, Zola's determination remains unbroken. 'I am going to fight," the Italian vowed.  'It is normal that when things are not going in the right direction you doubt what you are doing. 'But then I go back in my history and I say: 'Franco, you have been in so many difficult situations' and I have always come through and I rely on that.  'No matter what comes against me, I am going to come through and bounce back. I have no doubt.   'In this job, there are so many things that you need to look after and be good at. Sometimes I have doubted the tactical side, sometimes the psychology.  In trouble: West Ham head to Aston Villa just one place above the drop zone'I keep adjusting and getting better and better. I want to be top in this job that is for sure. I work on every aspect of the game and one day I will be like that.  '"This job has proved to be much more than I expected. I have to push myself and the players to do the best we can in the situation.   'If we get through we will better players and managers. What can I do? I'm not going to bang my head against the wall because of that. I am going to fight.' Zola urged West Ham's board to finalise the takeover situation as soon as possible because the uncertainty is beginning to unsettle his players.  'All this talk is affecting everybody and the sooner we get it sorted the better,' he said.   'The players want to know and they read a lot of things. We had a chat and we clarified it.  'As far as I am concerned our priority is on the pitch. It is not comfortable but it is not an excuse.' The Hammers travel to Villa Park without a senior striker after Guillermo Franco joined Carlton Cole, Luis Boa Morte and Kieron Dyer on the sidelines.  West Ham fined £115,000 for violence that marred Millwall Carling Cup tieTakeover saga is affecting the team, warns West Ham manager ZolaTHE FIRING LINE: Liverpool boss tops our table as the next for the chop!WEST HAM UNITED FC

Source: Daily_Mail