Gylfi Sigurdsson believes Swansea have made a mistake in sacking 'right man' Paul Clement

Image: Gylfi Sigurdsson believes Paul Clement was the 'right man' in charge at Swansea

Gylfi Sigurdsson has spoken of his surprise at the sacking of his former Swansea manager Paul Clement.

The midfielder, who is set to feature in Everton's Premier League meeting against Chelsea, on Saturday, live on Sky Sports Premier League, moved to Goodison Park for a club-record £45m in the summer after three-and-a-half seasons with the Swans.

The 28-year-old Iceland international played under three different managers last season - Francesco Guidolin, Bob Bradley and Clement, who led the club to safety - believes the Welsh club had the "right man" in charge.

"They definitely had the right man in Paul Clement," Sigurdsson told the Daily Mail.

"He is a top, top manager. I'm really surprised they let him go."

Advertisement
Image: Sigurdsson celebrated in muted fashion after scoring against his former side

Sigurdsson scored a stunning long-range strike in a 3-1 victory against his former club on Monday in Clement's final game in charge to keep Swansea rooted at the bottom of the table but was full of praise for his former boss.

"For Carlo Ancelotti to take him everywhere speaks volumes about what he can do and you could see why," Sigurdsson said.

Also See:

Merson's predictions

Who is going to come out on top in the Premier League this weekend? Paul Merson is back with his predictions.

"He is a fantastic coach and a fantastic manager. He is organised, speaks to you man-to-man. His training sessions are good, he's tactically aware of everything.

"He makes you feel good and, as a player, you want to play for that kind of manager. It is difficult when you are in that position. But anything is possible. You just keep going."

LISTEN: Transfer Talk

The first episode of our brand new Transfer Talk podcast is officially here!

Super 6 £1m jackpot

Simply predict six correct scores to win Jeff's £1 million. Enter your selections for free here.

Outbrain