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Another one bite di dust

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  • Another one bite di dust

    Sunderland axe O'Neill after dismal run leaves them one point above the drop zone



    PUBLISHED:21:40, 30 March 2013| UPDATED:22:33, 30 March 2013
    Relegation dogfight: The Premier League table


    Martin O'Neill parted company with Sunderland after the Black Cats slipped deeper into relegation trouble.
    The 61-year-old's departure was confirmed hours after Saturday's 1-0 home defeat by Manchester United, which left the club sitting just a point clear of the Barclays Premier League relegation zone with seven games left to play.
    A club statement said: 'Sunderland AFC has announced that it has parted company with manager Martin O'Neill this evening.

    Time's up: Sunderland have axed Martin O'Neill



    'The club would like to place on record its thanks to Martin and wishes him well for the future.
    'An announcement will be made in the coming days regarding a successor.'
    A run of eight league games without a win which has yielded only three points ultimately cost O'Neill his job after a little more than 15 months at the helm.
    The Black Cats' last victory came at Wigan on January 19, and with trips to European champions Chelsea and rivals Newcastle to come ahead of bogey team Everton's visit to the Stadium of Light on April 20, things could get worse before they get better.
    O'Neill, of course, was the man whose appointment Sunderland fans had craved for years, and his arrival at the Stadium of Light in December 2011 was greeted with delight.
    The Northern Irishman had never made any secret of his boyhood affection for the club and the chance to manage them fulfilled a long-held dream.

    Behind you: O'Neill was unable to stop Sir Alex Ferguson's Manchester United move step closer to the title



    Final act: Robin van Persie helped Manchester United to a 1-0 win at Sunderland

    His start was just what owner and chairman Ellis Short was looking for as a run of seven victories in his first 10 league games eased the club out of relegation trouble and sent spirits soaring.
    The Black Cats ran out of steam towards the end of the campaign, but with their top-flight status secured and the promise of a summer rebuilding programme, attention turned to the new campaign with genuine optimism.

    That only increased when Short provided O'Neill with a total of £22million with which to buy Scotland international striker Steven Fletcher and England winger Adam Johnson, and the American put his hand in his pocket once again in January to add Danny Graham and Alfred N'Diaye to the squad.

    However, only Fletcher, who was this week ruled out for the remainder of the season with ankle ligament damage, has hit the ground running with his 11 goals a major contribution to the 31 points they have claimed to date.
    Johnson in particular has failed to recreate the form he showed in his early days at Middlesbrough and then in spells after his move to Manchester City, while Graham is yet to find the back of the net in seven appearances.
    Short has been unhappy with results for several weeks, but writing in his programme notes today, he called for a united front.
    He said: 'Of course, there is nobody that is happy with our current position and the way our season is going. The reality is that we have a fight on our hands with eight games remaining.

    'We know that we are capable of playing better than we have been doing and we know that we need to begin doing so now.
    'I can assure you that every person at the club is doing everything they can to ensure that the season ends on a positive note and when the season is over, we can take stock of what happened.


    'Right now, however, there is only one thing that every one of us should be focused on, and that is doing our part whatever that is in helping this team to get the points we need.
    'I'm very aware that our supporters, who have backed us week in, week out in such huge numbers, aren't happy and fully understand why.
    'But right now, it is important for us all to be on the same side and get behind the team. Not being together will not help us to get results, so let's stand shoulder to shoulder and give the team our full support.'
    That stock-taking exercise was dramatically brought forward this evening.
    O'Neill was seemingly not expecting the development as he conducted his post-match press conference.
    He said: 'I am as buoyant now as - I was nearly going to say as I have always been.
    'What is it - the half-full or the half-empty glass? I'm even going to the three-quarters full.
    'There's a real determination in the dressing room. The players are obviously disappointed, but they can take a lot from the second half.
    'Yes, there is a determination about the players in there that we can do it.'
    It is understood the search for a successor is already under way and that the club hope to make a swift appointment.
    However, whoever gets the job faces the task of galvanising a squad for an intensely uncomfortable run-in with the stakes higher than ever as a result of the cash implications of the new broadcasting deal.
    The contenders for Sunderland job


    ROBERTO DI MATTEO
    Di Matteo has been out of work since leaving Chelsea in November, just six months after guiding them to Champions League success. He has not managed in a relegation fight, though, having being dispensed with by West Brom in 2011 when they looked like getting sucked into trouble. Whether he would be prepared to go from the Champions League to battling relegation to the Championship is also open to question.
    MARK HUGHES
    The former striker's reputation has been damaged by his unsuccessful 10-month stint in charge of QPR, overseeing their worst start to a Premier League season. He kept Rangers up last season, though, as well as excelling at Blackburn and impressing at Fulham.
    STEVE McCLAREN
    McClaren, whose reputation in England took a knock with his disastrous time in charge of the national team, is available again after leaving FC Twente in Holland last month. He has not managed in the Premier League since 2006, but did well in his time at other club in the north-east - Middlesbrough.
    OWEN COYLE
    The 46-year-old was regarded as one of the brightest up-and-coming British managers when he took Burnley into the Premier League and then started well at Bolton. Things did not work out at Wanderers, though, and he left the club following a poor start to this season. A new challenge could reignite his career.
    PAOLO DI CANIO
    The controversial Italian proved his potential in management at Swindon, winning the npower League Two title and leaving them well placed in League One before resigning in February after growing tired at the boardroom goings-on at the County Ground. He is on the lookout for a new job, but the Black Cats would be taking a risk by putting their Premier League survival in the hands of a boss with no experience in the top two divisions.




    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/foo...#ixzz2P49UAQQW
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  • #2
    Man u wasn't exactly sleep walking today so O'Neill is to be credited with fielding a decent team today. Besides, when was the last time we lost an EPL game?
    For heavens sake this is an unprecedented period in the EPL, Man U getting points from away games is the contributing factor.
    My guess is Sunderland needs a coach exactly like O'Neill at this time to avoid relegation.
    Soooo sad.

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