Crystal Palace midfielder Adam Wharton has no complaints about his surprise England omission and plans to use his some of his unexpected free time to visit grandparents.
Instead of being at Wembley to face Wales and then heading to Latvia for a World Cup qualifier the 21-year-old, who has become an integral part of the Eaglesā recent success, will instead catch up with relatives after being left out by national team boss by Thomas Tuchel.
Even Evertonās match-winner Jack Grealish, himself overlooked for England despite a resurgence after moving to Merseyside on loan from Manchester City, felt Wharton should have been given the man-of-the-match award instead of him in the Toffeesā late 2-1 victory on Sunday.
Wharton reveals Tuchel message
After pulling out of Tuchelās last squad with injury there was no place for Wharton this time around but the player insists there are no hard feelings.
āHe just gave me a message saying Iām playing well, Iām close and I deserve to be there but heās going to stick with the same team,ā said Wharton of learning of his omission.
āThatās football, Iām not too fussed about that. I can take the time off, go see my grandparents, and itās not the end of the world as thereās another camp next month.
āNothing is expected. England have some top players and heās got a lot of players to choose from. No matter who he picks someone is not going to get in and there will be a fuss about it.
āI canāt sit here and cry about it, this is football and Iām happy playing for Palace and getting minutes and trying to do as well as I can and improve and if I get picked, I get picked.
āIf not Iāll carry on playing for Palace and enjoying it ā thereās nothing else I can do really.
āObviously everyone wants to play for their country if they get chosen but, like I said, this is football and heās got plenty of top players to choose from and thatās what he gets paid to do, pick the team and help England do well.
āHopefully they kick on and get the results they need to qualify for the World Cup. Iāll keep knocking on the door and if Iām in, Iām in and if not Iāll carry on.ā
Even Everton manager David Moyes accepted Palace should have been well out of sight after Daniel Munozās goal in a first half dominated by the visitors but after failing to capitalise they fell foul of an improved display after the break.
Iliman Ndiaye scored a 76th-minute penalty before Grealish, the Premier Leagueās player of the month for August, blocked a Munoz clearance and the ball cannoned back off him and into the net in the third minute of added time to end Palaceās 19-match unbeaten run.
āI think we got a bit complacent as we were playing so well but you canāt do that in the Premier League,ā added Wharton
.
āThey got a goal back and the crowd got behind them, a great atmosphere for them to kick on, get the momentum and it was difficult from there.ā