Emiliano Sala's late father said footballer was 'abandoned like a dog' after £15m transfer to Cardiff

Tributes: footballer Emiliano Sala

The late father of Emiliano Sala said the star footballer was left "like a dog" after the £15 million transfer to Cardiff.

Sala, 28, had just signed from French side Nantes when he disappeared with the pilot of the Piper Malibu private plane when it crashed in the English Channel north of Guernsey on January 21.

His body was recovered on February 6 following an extensive search but pilot David Ibbotson, 59, of Crowle, Lincolnshire, has not been located.

Horacio Sala died in April, but told BBC Wales before his death that all parties involved in the transfer - including clubs and agents - should have made more effort to look after the welfare of his son.

He said: "I always expected to find him alive, but when the news said the plane was in the sea, it became impossible.

"Why was it so hard for them to find something safe? Why couldn't they?

Horacio Sala, father of Argentine footballer Emiliano Sala, died in April
AP

"They left him alone, they left him alone like a dog. They abandoned him."

His mother, Mercedes Taffarel, added: "It still hurts so much.

"I think he's going to call me on the phone, but no. It's terrible, a pain that I can't explain."

The family want someone to be held accountable for the death, the BBC reported.

An investigation into the plane crash which killed the Argentine footballer will focus on the validity of the pilot's licence.

The Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB) named "regulatory requirements" as one of four areas in which further work will be carried out.

Its interim report noted that the type of licence held by the pilot meant he could only fly passengers in the European Union on a cost-sharing basis, rather than for commercial flights.

Pilots with his licence "must have a bona fide purpose for making the flight", according to the AAIB.

Emiliano Sala: The family's search for truth airs on BBC One Wales at 8.30pm on May 20 and on the BBC iPlayer.

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