Sunderland defying expectations under O'Neill

By Dan Talintyre / Roar Guru

December had just begun and Sunderland were truly down in the dumps. Since the start of the 2011-12 English Premier League season, they’d managed just two wins – one coming against a last-placed Bolton.

They’d chalked up 11 measly points in 13 weeks of play and it seemed destined that the Black Cats were in serious relegation trouble.

Fed up with frustration and inabilities to perform on the pitch, Martin O’Neill became the new manager of Sunderland, replacing Steve Bruce, the first casualty of a mediocre season.

The expectations on O’Neill couldn’t have been simpler, really – stop losing and start winning.

His first match would be a home game against fellow relegation zone battlers Blackburn, who took the lead after 17 minutes via Simon Vukcevic and led for the majority of the match.

When Vaughan scored in the 84th minute, O’Neill must have been relieved that his side had not churned out another defeat, and his management at the club didn’t start out with a loss.

Well, imagine then what he must have felt when in the 90th minute of play, Sebastian Larsson grabbed the winner for the Black Cats and for the first time in a little while, the home fans went absolutely crazy.

O’Neill’s victorious leap in the air still remains one of the images of the season.

From there, it’s been up and up for Sunderland, who now sit eighth on the Premier League table and undefeated at home since that incredible win over Blackburn.

And believe it not, since that first match under O’Neill, the Black Cats are leading the English Premier League when you consider they’ve chalked up more points in that time than any other club in the league, including the likes of Tottenham, Chelsea and both Manchester clubs.

With a mouth-watering home match against Arsenal over the weekend, and then a replay of that match in their fourth round FA Cup duel, fans of the Black Cats must surely see one if not both games as possible wins.

At home, they managed to topple league leaders Manchester City with another 90th minute thriller, and one wonders if they will repeat a similar dosage for the Gunners – a side with Champions League dreams on the line.

Whatever the case, Sunderland fans must be simply delighted with their side’s current progress and their performances under O’Neill.

What he’s achieved already with the club is nothing short of incredible, and Black Cats fans must surely feel that the future is bright.

Under O’Neill, they are simply a different side from the one that started the year. They are not tackling liabilities, and they pose as genuine threats when attacking.

If Sunderland continue this stellar form, they are not only guaranteed a top-half finish, but most likely a finish in the top six, sitting amongst the likes of Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal.

And with a home game to Arsenal this week, whilst Chelsea, Liverpool, Tottenham and Newcastle all face tough games, it stands to reason that the UEFA Champions League isn’t out of the picture yet for the Black Cats, especially if they continue to perform like they have done in recent weeks.

It might be hopeful, and it might just be dreaming, but considering the success that O’Neill is having with this Sunderland side, it’s not the most unlikely scenario.

The most unlikely scenario would have been the Black Cats losing once in their last eight and conceding four goals since Christmas. Oh wait….

The Crowd Says:

2012-02-14T11:34:47+00:00

Tim

Guest


There is a reason your still a roar rookie, no way can Sunderland make champions league football. And it you wrote this today, we played arsenal in the league last week and were lucky not to get beat 3-0, we defended all game. We are also running 9th (not 8th) and are not undefeated at home. We got beat by Arsenal on the weekend and we now play them in the FA Cup which is now is our main target. As a Sunderland fan for 15 years, we are playing well. But at the end of the day we are playing the same quality that we were with Bruce. However the only difference is, with Bruce we could not score any goals. We have the same number of chances but simply we could not score. We would hit the posts, just missed or simply our strikers stuffed up. Our defense is also the same, so there is no logic in your writing there. With our results last year and the money we spent on players with all due to respects, expectations this seasons were for a top half finish. It will be interesting as we have a huge injury crisis, and now for sometime. O'Neill has been using the same group of 11-15 players for the last 2 months with busy workloads. We have had a good run, but to place all credit on O'Neill is childish and completely lacking logic. Truly this article is something that a person would only gather from looking at results and not watching football games. To call the Sunderland players tackling liabilities, really.....

AUTHOR

2012-02-14T04:55:00+00:00

Dan Talintyre

Roar Guru


Hi Matt. Thanks for the read and comment. I do agree, it's a little optimistic, but it's not completely out of the question. I completely agree with you though about the fact that those games against Newcastle and Liverpool are huge though; wins there and they are turning a 'good' season in to a 'great' season. Still, what they've achieved so far is incredible, and they were unlucky against Arsenal not to at least grab a point. Guess we'll just have to wait and see how the Black Cats finish up.

2012-02-13T22:43:15+00:00

Matt F

Roar Guru


You lost me when you said top 6. They're still 9 points behind (the mighty) Newcastle in 6th and 6 behind Liverpool in 7th. That's a big gap to make up. O'Neill is a very good manager but there I suspect there is a "new manager" effect that some teams get. As a Newcastle fan I was devastated when they got rid of Steve Bruce as he seemed to be bringing them down from the inside! After their next game against West Brom, they're away for the derby against Newcastle before playing Liverpool. If they can win those then they can start thinking about top 6. A top half finish is definately on the cards though. It's probably around what they expected at the start of the season, but much better then what they expected when bruce was sacked.

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