Martin
O’Neill was sacked as Sunderland manager after his side’s 1-0 home
defeat by Manchester United left them teetering on the relegation
precipice.
The
defeat at the Stadium of Light, the result of a Titus Bramble own goal,
left Sunderland just one point above the relegation zone and without a
win in eight Premier League games.
Before
Saturday’s match Sunderland chairman Ellis Short called for all
involved with the club to stand ‘shoulder to shoulder’ but he decided to
act with just seven games of the season remaining.
A
club statement said: "Sunderland has parted company with manager Martin
O’Neill this evening. The club would like to record its thanks to
Martin and wish him well for the future. An announcement will be made in
the coming days regarding a successor."
Former
FC Twente manager Steve McClaren, out of work since resigning on
February 26, emerged last night as the favourite to take over, although
his history as Middlesbrough manager would make him an unpopular choice.
Roberto
Di Matteo, sacked by Chelsea, and former QPR and Manchester City boss
Mark Hughes will also be front runners to replace O’Neill, while
Brighton manager Gus Poyet could also come into contention.
A
run that yielded only three points in eight matches ultimately cost
O’Neill, 61, his job after a little more than 15 months at the helm.
Sunderland’s 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 on April 20, things could get worse before they
get better.
O’Neill’s
£5million signing of striker Danny Graham from Swansea during the
January window was also an unpopular move and the self-confessed
Newcastle United fan has failed to score since his arrival.
Last week, top scorer Steven Fletcher and captain Lee Cattermole were both ruled out for the rest of the season through injury.
O’Neill,
a Sunderland supporter as a boy, was a popular appointment when he
signed a three-year deal in December 2011, taking over from Steve Bruce.
But
he has been unable to deliver the consistency in performances the
Sunderland board demanded, winning 22 times in 70 matches with 27
defeats. 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.
His
start was just what Short was looking for as a run of seven victories
in his first 10 league games raised great optimism before the revival
ran out of steam at the end of his first season in charge.
Despite another miserable campaign this season, it had appeared Short intended to keep faith with his manager.
Writing
in his programme notes ahead of yesterday’s game, Short said: "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, it is important for us all to be on the same side and get behind the team."
O’Neill
was clearly not expecting to be sacked. At his post-match Press
conference yesterday, he said: "There’s a real determination in the
dressing room that we can do it."
Former
England international Alan Shearer has described the timing of
Sunderland’s decision to part company with manager Martin O’Neill as
‘bizarre.’
Speaking
on BBC1′s ‘Match of the Day’, the former Newcastle striker and manager
said: "It’s bizarre. They have gone down the route that Reading have
(sacking Brian McDermott).
"I look at him in the last few weeks and normally he comes on telly, we see him upbeat, looking forward to things.
"To
me he’s been down, he’s not been his usual, energetic self – whether
he’s known that something is going on behind the scenes I don’t know.
"They are on a terrible run of form but it is the timing of it I find hard.
"I think he might have missed his right-hand man John Robertson, who for the first time hadn’t been with him at his side.
"For
whatever reason didn’t choose to go to Sunderland like he’d been with
all his other clubs with him so I think he has probably missed him as
well."
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