Wear-Tyne derby: Eddie Howe not worried about job security ahead of Sunderland game
The side's meet at the Stadium of Light in the 3rd round of the FA Cup
Newcastle boss Eddie Howe will go into the FA Cup clash with derby rivals Sunderland adamant he does not need daily reassurances from the club's big-spending owners.
The Magpies will run out for the third-round tie at the Stadium of Light having lost seven of their last eight games and each of the most recent four in all competitions.
It is a sequence which has led to speculation that Howe's future as head coach under a Saudi-backed regime which has invested around £400million in new players since taking over in October 2021 could be uncertain.
Sources on Tyneside have dismissed talk of pressure on the 46-year-old in the wake of a difficult run, although defeat by the Black Cats is unthinkable if a season which has already brought Champions league and Carabao Cup disappointment is not to deteriorate further.
Asked about the speculation, Howe said: "I certainly don't need daily reassurances. I feel comfortable in the fact that we are working as hard as we can to improve performances and improve results.
"Obviously I know it's a results-based business - all the usual things you'd expect me to say - but I do feel the support from the club, and that's really important in this moment."
The Magpies and the Black Cats have enjoyed very different fortunes since the clubs last met almost eight years ago with the Amanda Stavely-led £305million takeover having sparked fresh optimism on Tyneside at a time when Sunderland were fighting their way back from back-to-back relegations and a four-year stay in League One.
However, the Wearside club had enjoyed six successive victories over their neighbours before a 1-1 draw last time out and new boss Michael Beale this week ventured the opinion that in terms of size, stature and history, there is little - other than hard cash - between them.
Howe, whose last visit to Sunderland in April 2017 saw his Bournemouth side relegate David Moyes' men, said: "I'm not going to get into a war of words with any manager, I just don't think it's wise to make those comparisons or comments.
"We know who we are and what we are. I certainly know more about the size of this football club since managing it and the future is very bright no matter what happens in the short term."
Howe, who identified Sunderland wide men Jack Clarke and Patrick Roberts - the latter is an injury doubt this weekend - as significant threats, is desperate to end a grim run of results which has seen his side win only once since a 1-0 Premier League victory over Manchester United on December 2, and admits achieving that at the Stadium of Light could rekindle his side's campaign.
He said: "It can certainly reboot us and just change the external - and even internal - view of ourselves because it can change very quickly.
"I have made reference to it many times; the Manchester United game, our best performance of the season, was not that long ago and now the view is very different on the team.
"Confidence is a very fragile thing for the players as well, so anything that helps them re-find their best rhythm as quickly as possible is what we're seeking."