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Emmanuel Adebayor to leave Crystal Palace, Alan Pardew signing new deal

Emmanuel Adebayor has said his "journey" with Crystal Palace will come to an end after the FA Cup final with Manchester United, while manager Alan Pardew is set to sign a new contract ahead of the Saturday match.

Adebayor, 32, joined Palace on a free transfer in January after his four-year spell with Tottenham ended badly amid controversy with manager Mauricio Pochettino that saw him stripped of his number and relegated to practicing with Spurs' Under-21 team.

"The journey will stop in May, but that's not the end of my journey," Adebayor said in quotes appearing in the Mirror. "It is just a stop. It will continue, wherever I go to."

"I will always wish this club well. It doesn't matter if I start the Manchester United game on the bench or the gaffer decides to put me in the stands -- at the end of the day we want to win it. This club wants to win it.

"Every player, whether they start or not or are not even in the squad of 18, want the club to win the FA Cup. It is as simple as that."

Meanwhile, manager Pardew will commit his future to the club by signing a new contract before the final.

Despite a poor run of league form during the second half of the season that ended with them finishing 15th, the manager has impressed since his appointment and has been rewarded with an undisclosed extension on his original agreement, which ran to 2018.

Asked of the new contract which has long been agreed, Pardew said: "We are probably going to [sign] it before the game.''

The manager has done much to rebuild his reputation since returning to Palace in January 2015, and victory on Saturday would represent his finest achievement.

It would also mark 10 years since his West Ham team almost won the 2006 FA Cup against Liverpool, and 26 since Palace lost to United in a final replay while he was a player.

Beyond the personal satisfaction, however, Pardew believes it would also benefit English coaches.

Since Joe Royle's Everton defeated United in the 1995 final, Harry Redknapp - with Portsmouth in 2008 - is the only English manager to win the FA Cup and none have won the Premier League.

With promising English coaches Gary Neville and Paul Clement among those sacked this season, by Valencia and Derby respectively, Pardew is concerned about their collective reputation and said: "It would be good for this club and English coaches to win it.

"I've come so close, as an English manager probably the closest for a long time, to winning it. Harry won it with Portsmouth. But we get a really bad press as English coaches and managers.

"I could name numerous situations where foreign managers get a kinder press than English managers. [But] I want to talk about the final.''

Pardew also revealed that beyond Joe Ledley, who could miss Euro 2016 with Wales because of a fractured fibula, he has a fully-fit squad from which to choose for Saturday's fixture.

Pardew said he was unsure what the future held for Adebayor, but praised the contribution the striker has made to their preparation.

"He's come up with some really good stuff this week, some messages to the players,'' said Pardew, 54. "He's been brilliant around the place.

"I haven't had those discussions with Ade [about his future], and I'll still sit down with him at the end of the year, shake his hand and see where we want to go. He'll have numerous options, so we'll see.

"He knows the pressure of playing at Real Madrid, so of a big final. That's a pressure we need to understand.

"Senior players like [Jason] Puncheon, [Yohan] Cabaye, [James] McArthur, [Yannick Bolasie and Wilfried Zaha] are going to be key players. Adebayor off the bench could play a significant role. In that group we have enough to win this game.''

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