
Audio By Carbonatix
Sunderland have sacked manager Martin O'Neill, just hours after a 1-0 defeat to Premier League leaders Manchester United pushed them closer to the relegation trapdoor."Sunderland AFC has announced that it has parted company with manager Martin O'Neill this evening," said a club statement."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."The 61-year-old Northern Irishman was in charge at the Stadium of Light for just 16 months having succeeded Steve Bruce in December 2011.But Saturday's home loss to United left Sunderland just two places and only one point above the relegation zone.Sunderland have now gone eight games without a win, picking up just two points in the process."There is a determination among the players that we can do it. And I'm as buoyant as I've always been," said O'Neill in the immediate aftermath of the loss."Overall, I'm pleased with the performance and I think it bodes well. But there's always a danger that you're going to struggle for confidence and self-belief when you haven't won a long time."His record at the club was 21 wins, 20 draws and 25 defeats in his 66 matches in charge, having taken the club to 13th place in the Premier League in his first season.O'Neill becomes the fifth top-flight manager to lose his job this season following the sackings of Roberto Di Matteo at Chelsea, Mark Hughes at Queens Park Rangers, Nigel Adkins from Southampton and Reading's Brian McDermott.Bookmakers quickly made Di Matteo the favourite to take over with Hughes the second-favourite.O'Neill's sacking, with just seven games remaining in the Premier League season, left observers stunned."Surprised Martin O'Neill has been sacked despite their recent run of results. Starting to get tight at the bottom after Wigan's win today," tweeted former England striker Michael Owen.O'Neill spent the bulk of his playing career at Nottingham Forest, where he won a European Cup winner's medal in 1980.As a coach, he managed Wycombe Wanderers, Norwich, Leicester, Celtic and Aston Villa before switching to Sunderland.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Burna Boy becomes African artiste with most Billboard Hot 100 entries
5 minutes -
Chinese bid for Atlantic Lithium puts Ghana’s local ownership model at Ewoyaa to the test
12 minutes -
Eight sentenced to 450 years in prison over anti-ICE riot where officer was shot
13 minutes -
Mrs Clarice Jobson-Mitchual nee Mccorquodale
18 minutes -
Eleven more bodies of migrants wash ashore from capsize last week off Libya
30 minutes -
Family of Zambia’s ex-leader should choose his burial site, SAfrica court says
39 minutes -
Attack kills 20 in Nigeria’s central Plateau attack
47 minutes -
Morocco target top spot in group ahead of Brazil
56 minutes -
Nigerian SEC orders halt to marketing for Dangote refinery IPO
1 hour -
Oil extends slide on expectations of smoother crude flows via Hormuz
1 hour -
Libya’s eastern government bans entry of nationals from four African countries
1 hour -
Kenya signs $1.2bn deal with Chinese firm to expand Nairobi airport
2 hours -
US presses Meta to agree to AI reviews as security concerns rise, NYT reports
2 hours -
Unpaid bonuses and food issues – what’s going on inside Senegal camp?
2 hours -
Silly tackle, bad reaction – Tuchel defends Bellingham after Queiroz row
2 hours