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Couldn't have had much of an easier game for his first one, they will be amusing tomorrow if they win.

 

Be even more amusing if they don't...

 

Nah I reckon most of them will just blame Bruce and how Super Martin O'Neill needs to rebuild etc..

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Couldn't have had much of an easier game for his first one, they will be amusing tomorrow if they win.

 

Be even more amusing if they don't...

 

Nah I reckon most of them will just blame Bruce and how Super Martin O'Neill needs to rebuild etc..

 

:sadnod:

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Couldn't have had much of an easier game for his first one, they will be amusing tomorrow if they win.

 

Be even more amusing if they don't...

 

Nah I reckon most of them will just blame Bruce and how Super Martin O'Neill needs to rebuild etc..

 

But you get limited chances per season to play teams like Blackburn at home, fail to take 3 points and without doubt they have issues, MON and rebuilding programs or not.

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Blackburn are s*** but they've proved that on occasion they have goals in them. Scored four a few times, hopefully can do it again.

 

Agreed Blackburn seem to have goals at the minute but Sunderland have nothing up front. Don't think it's cut and dried as people are making out.

 

My preferred scenario is it going to the last game of the season and them staying  up due to other results so we can twat the fuck out of them next season.

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Blackburn are shit but they've proved that on occasion they have goals in them. Scored four a few times, hopefully can do it again.

Thats my big hope, after Yak scored 4 last week he must look at that mackem defence and fancy his chances.

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Couldn't have had much of an easier game for his first one, they will be amusing tomorrow if they win.

 

Be even more amusing if they don't...

 

Nah I reckon most of them will just blame Bruce and how Super Martin O'Neill needs to rebuild etc..

 

But you get limited chances per season to play teams like Blackburn at home, fail to take 3 points and without doubt they have issues, MON and rebuilding programs or not.

 

Just got a feeling O'Neill to Sunderland is what Dalgleish is to Liverpool, they worship the ground he walks on, this is their chance, all or nothing, if he can't do it they may as well give up and we have seen how in denial they can be at times.

 

It would be the same if they signed N'Zogbia and he played like Ali Dia for 60 games, it would be the rest of the teams fault and they wouldn't be giving him the right service/runs.

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Martin O’Neill will begin his reign as Sunderland manager against Blackburn Rovers this weekend with the aim of transforming the Black Cats into a team playing with the same style and finesse as Barcelona.

 

Sunderland manager Martin O’Neill wants his team to play the Barcelona way but may have to be more pragmatic against Blackburn Rovers

 

O’Neill is aware his bold vision for a club that has never finished in the top six of the Premier League will prompt sniggers, as well as raise eyebrows, but the Ulsterman was not telling a joke.

 

In the 16 months he has spent out of the game following his sudden departure from Aston Villa, O’Neill has spent much of his time analysing different teams and their style of play.

 

And a manager who has sometimes been criticised in the past for playing a bland brand of football has been bewitched by the high octane pass-and-press game of the Spanish and European champions.

 

It is in their image that O’Neill hopes to get Sunderland performing on Wearside, although he admits a side hovering just one place above the relegation zone ahead of Sunday’s home game with Blackburn needs pragmatic rather than pretty football in its current predicament.

 

“I always come back to the way Barcelona play,” said O’Neill when asked what he would like his Sunderland team to represent. “It’s a long way in the future, but you’d love to keep that in the back of your mind and think you could eventually have a team that could come out and play like that.

 

“Over the course of time, people will probably throw that back at me. Over the last couple of years, Arsenal have been very easy on the eye and it would be lovely to play a brand of football that would excite the crowd.

 

“But we need to win some football matches and I suppose at the moment pragmatism has to be the order of the day. We have to win games.”

 

Given the success he enjoyed at Aston Villa as a counter-attacking team, O’Neill might be expected to adopt a similar strategy at Sunderland, but he does not think it is an option open to him.

 

He explained: “We seemed to have a reputation at Aston Villa for being a counter-attacking and when you have the likes of [James] Milner, [Ashley] Young, [stewart] Downing and [Gabriel] Agbonlahor playing in the side, that’s probably quite true.

 

“There was a lot of pace in the side so it was almost natural to play that way, particularly away from home.

 

“I don’t think, from the first look here, that we have that same kind of pace in the team at the moment, so you’d have to adjust accordingly.”

 

Sunderland have won just three times at the Stadium of Light in 2011, a dreadful run and the biggest single reason behind the demise of Steve Bruce as manager.

 

O’Neill has made an improvement in the team’s home form one of his main priorities as Bruce’s successor and a win over Rovers on Sunday would restore the buffer between Sunderland and the bottom three.

 

A defeat, however, would see Steve Kean’s side move above them in the table and O’Neill’s hand ahead of his first game has been weakened by injuries, as well as captain Lee Cattermole’s suspension.

 

Striker Nicklas Bendtner has not trained all week and neither has defender John O’Shea, while full-back Phil Bardsley is troubled by a reoccurring ankle problem.

 

Bendtner has failed to fire so far during his loan move from Arsenal, but he is the most talented forward in the squad O’Neill inherits and getting the best out of the Dane is a must for O’Neill given the lack of alternative goal sources.

 

“It’s paramount to get the best out of Nicklas,” he said. “He has a lot of natural talent, but wasn’t always in the starting line-up at Arsenal. They have allowed him to come up here and it’s an important time for him. This season is one where he can come through and score some goals.

 

“He might have to adapt to a different style of play because Arsenal tend to have the ball all the time in the vast majority of matches, even against the best teams in the league.

 

“With respect, we might not have the ball as often as that. So he’ll have to adjust and readjust during the course of a game. Most importantly of course, he has to get some goals.”

 

 

:lol:

 

Imagine if Pardew came out with that bulllshit.

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