Gary Neville: I'm not bringing Manchester United style to Valencia
Gary Neville insists he will not try to replicate Sir Alex Ferguson's Manchester United style of football in his new role as coach of Valencia.
The former Red Devils captain has been put in charge of the Spanish side until the end of the season and he has admitted that his experience playing under Ferguson would be "invaluable" in his first role at the helm of a club.
Neville is determined to adapt to the players at his disposal, however, and says it would be insulting to arrive in Spain talking about how things are done at United.
"I'm not going to insult Valencia by saying I'm coming over here and playing football like Manchester United," Neville told reporters.
"My experience with Sir Alex Ferguson is invaluable but when you talk about style it will be very different against Barcelona at the weekend to against Lyon [in the Champions League] next week.
"Every coach wants to play attacking football to entertain the fans but we've also got to find a way to win."
Neville was also uninterested in discussing any long-term ambitions of taking charge at Old Trafford.
The 40-year-old has become the bookmakers' third favourite, behind Pep Guardiola and Ryan Giggs, to take over from Louis van Gaal since his appointment at Valencia was confirmed.
"From a long-term perspective I would never look at that or future jobs," he insisted. "I'm focused completely on the next two training sessions and the team to pick for Wednesday.
"We all have dreams but the only way you get there is focusing on the individual bits one at a time."
Neville, who confirmed that former Valencia star Miguel Angel Angulo would join his coaching staff, wants to restore Mestalla's status as one of Europe's most intimidating venues.
"I understand, from playing against Valencia, the passion and intimidation of the fans and I want to recreate and harness that," he said.
"I'm aware of the traditions here at Valencia - I've played out here a few times against some fantastic wingers.
"I understand my responsibility is to appraise the players as quickly as possible and pick the right system that gets us winning matches right away, irrespective of style.
"On Sunday afternoon when I received this offer it represented a challenge that I couldn't refuse."
When asked how he would balance managing Valencia with his continued role with the England national team, Neville explained: "When I spoke to Roy Hodgson he was incredibly supportive and positive and enthusiastic.
"He understood completely the opportunity for myself and was wholly supportive that I should do it. We've got two games in March which are in an international break, when Valencia don't play.
"From my point of view, I wanted to continue to complete my job through to Euro 2016 and everyone is completely understanding that Valencia will be my priority 95 per cent of the time."