Bolton Wanderers midfielder Josh Sheehan is relaxed about his Wales ambitions and is fully focused on his form for his club and knows that his international career will take care of itself if he performs.
The 26-year-old joined Wanderers over the summer after leaving Newport County.
He has been one of the stars in the Bolton midfield this season and has scored four goals in all competitions so far this campaign.
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He has been called up to Wales squad on a couple of occasions now since he joined Wanderers and has three caps to his name.
In this international break, he had been called up to the full squad, but remained with Wanderers owing to a back injury which he has now overcome.
The Bolton midfielder knows that if he performs for his club, then international recognition will follow, and he now feels at home at the club and settled.
He said:“My main focus is playing well for Bolton. Wales is in the background, obviously, and if I get called up then my thoughts are there.
"But I can only be there if I am doing well for Bolton, the rest takes care of itself. If I am not playing well then it doesn’t come into the equation.
“I have had a few months here now and I do feel settled. My family has moved up here now, we have a house, and I know and get on with most of the boys as well.
"It has been an easy place to settle because of the way we play, I fit straight in because that is what I grew up doing.”
Sheehan is part of a Wanderers side that has gone unbeaten in their last three matches in all competitions.
Wanderers are next in action this Wednesday when they take on Stockport County in an FA Cup first round replay, before taking on Wycombe Wanderers this Saturday in League One on the road.
And he believes that confidence is helping to dicate Wanderers' form and is hoping the League One club can maintain that winning feeling in the upcoming games.
He said: “It moves on to Wednesday now and then Wycombe away. We take it game by game and we want to keep on winning.
“Confidence is massive in football, things were easy when we were winning games and playing great football. But then you have a not-so-great month in October and confidence took a big hit, it felt like things were not going our way.
"It shows that one win can change everything, and hopefully that can carry on now."