Joe Hart waits to learn next destination after Man City exit

England goalkeeper Joe Hart says he has not yet had any offers as he prepares for a future away from Manchester City.

Joe Hart waits to learn next destination after Man City exit

England goalkeeper Joe Hart says he has not yet had any offers as he prepares for a future away from Manchester City.

His popularity at the Etihad Stadium counted for little when Pep Guardiola arrived last year and Hart was instead sent on loan to Italian side Torino.

Hart has returned from Serie A but does not foresee a change in his situation with City, who have spent £35m on uncapped Brazil goalkeeper Ederson after Claudio Bravo's unconvincing first campaign.

The 30-year-old Hart is trying not to think about his club future as England prepare to end their season with a friendly against France, but he admitted his career is "almost in the hands of the businessmen now" as he remains patient during this "game of chess".

"I would love to give you a poker-straight answer, but I've got nothing at the moment because I think people are focused on international duty and respecting that players are focusing on international duty," Hart said.

"Come Tuesday night, I don't know how everyone else finishes, after that is when conversations can be had and people can start being real.

"I need an offer first and then I need to work out my options if I have choices. I want to be playing at the highest possible level, pushing myself.

"It's a short career. I want to push everything out of me. Physically I feel in great condition and I want to go again."

West Ham are the latest club to be linked with Hart, who admits he does not know what price City will want for him.

"It's hard to say (the fee City set is) realistic because football is a business at the end of the day and you can't judge, it's hard to judge realistically.

"The millions and zillions of pounds that get paid for someone to come and play football for you in the real world is strange, but in the business world, the football world it's normal.

"I certainly don't think they are going to try and price me out of a move, I think there's enough respect between the player and club.

"We're going to work together, there's no point in working against. There's no animosity between the two. They are going in their direction and I need to go in mine.

"It's my life, it's me, it's my 'normal'. I am no robot, sometimes I do have thoughts about it. There is nothing to get down about. It's just another exciting adventure, another move, the next step in my career, next chapter, next challenge for me personally.

"I love personal challenges and I have never shied away from one and I don't intend to. If the switch is what needs to happen, and that's key, we all need stability in our life.

"I'm not a kid any more, I can't just pack my stuff like a 19, 17-year-old and go on loan. I am a 30-year-old man with stuff I need to organise. I like stability.

"There is an ideal situation to come out of this but nothing is perfect. It's a short career and football is crazy so I have to be prepared for anything."

Hart's England place is also coming under scrutiny, after Scotland's Leigh Griffiths beat him with two free-kicks in Saturday's 2-2 World Cup qualifier.

Hart felt the England wall could have done him a favour if they had jumped for the first free-kick.

"It might have helped but 'coulda, shoulda, woulda'," Hart said.

"I asked my wall to jump but not excessively because people are clever now and they go underneath.

"But I've seen it again and we would have needed four or five Peter Crouches in that wall to make a difference and that's not what we had."

Hart says his analysis switches to the set-pieces of Dimitri Payet and Paul Pogba, but Gareth Southgate intends to give Jack Butland, Fraser Forster or Tom Heaton a start against France.

Such talent, along with England Under-21 goalkeeper Jordan Pickford, makes the 71-cap goalkeeper appreciate every England appearance.

"I've got to respect this career, this shirt's not mine," Hart added. "It's not nailed-on mine, it's no one's and we've got high quality and I have to be playing football at the top level, to the maximum of my ability to even get in the squad at the moment.

"That's the plan but the goalkeeping world is a strange world and patience is probably going to have to be key at the moment."

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