With the Trotters' 2012/13 strategy already wrapped up, the supporters and people alike are looking towards next period. The consensus seems to be a generally speaking positive attitude towards a much better 2013 and with it, a come back to the top flight. A warning have been however, issued by zat Knight, as he knows the range of the task that's forward for Bolton Wanderers. Talking with the Manchester Evening News, Knight, the existing chief, explained: "I thought to the kids during the week I think next year will probably function as toughest Championship. "It is going to be considered a mini-Premier League with the groups coming down and perhaps one or two major groups that may be coming up as well. "It is difficult to get. I've 12 months left on my contract and it would have been nice to note that out in the Premier League. However it is not meant to be. However, I am experiencing next time already and, hopefully, we can have a great pre-season and go again. "Maybe if the boss had been here a bit before perhaps we'd have been endorsed or in the play-offs." Queens Park Rangers and Reading have been relegated from the Premier League and with two games left in the season, the main one other group that will drop is yet to be resolved. Wigan happens to be occupying that room but they have a game title in hand on Newcastle and Norwich City, both of which are only three things free from the drop. Sunderland sit only two points above the Latics but they, like Wigan, have three games to go. Bournemouth and Doncaster would be the two groups proved to be coming up from League One with Sheffield United, Yeovil Town, Swindon Town, and Brentford all vying for that final place. Bournemouth's director, Eddie Howe, had overwhelmed Bolton Wanderers in 2013 while managing Burnley. His feelings would be also made by knight known in a sideline meeting directly following the Blackpool match, discussing how hard it had been to get the outcome and passing up on the play-offs: Zat might carry on to talk about the future changes in the group required by the departures of Kevin Davies and Jay Spearing, among (possibly) others: "He is one you are able to count on and Kev [Davies] is going to be a massive loss as a team-mate and being an individual. He is a large personality and whoever he would go to will have a massive gain." "There are likely to be changes. Hopefully the director would bring in the right players to increase what he's got."
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