Soapbox: It’s a wonderful life

Soapbox

Pete Sixsmith looks at a vital win achieved without a manager, and like Black, Jimmy Stewart and the population of Bedford Falls he decides that football is a Wonderful Life – when you are winning!!

Wasn’t it nice to see and hear a Sunderland manager laughing and joking with the ladies and gentlemen of the press on Saturday? After listening to Mick McCarthy’s often tortured and convoluted attempts to get one over on the media, followed by Roy Keane’s ‘Who are you to challenge me on anything?’ attitude, Ricky Sbragia comes across as an easy going, relaxed kinda guy, who is comfortable with his situation and who just loves working with players.

Some of the routines that Roy brought in, which I gather made many of the players see the SoL as Stalag Keaneo, have been dropped. I would imagine that the management at The Ramside are disappointed and that Durham’s taxi drivers are cursing the departure of the Bearded One, but the decision to allow the players to spend the night in their own beds (or that of someone close to them), seems to have had a positive effect.

For many of us, a night away from home is an adventure, a chance to eat and drink the contents of the mini-bar, complain about the shower head, run up and down the corridor in your underpants and scoff a huge breakfast that you don’t really want but you’ve paid for, so you might as well wolf it down. I guess if you are doing it every week it becomes a bit of a drag.

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Who are you? We’re the Baggies

Paul Hanson is a West Brom fan with a great Sunderland story to tell. His son Mitch, who had overcome serious hearing problems to become a very decent footballer on the fringe of international schoolboy honours, spent a little time at the Stadium of Light under Mick McCarthy and taught Liam Lawrence all he knows (OK, some of what he knows).
Paul, a committed fan of SuperKev, who did wonders for both of our clubs (and especially SAFC), will travel from his home in Lincolnshire to Saturday’s vital game with Mackem friends.
In a departure from our usual format, there is no Q&A this week. This was not intended. But Paul, for all his tireless work these days for the community, must have been one hell of a back four blocker during his own football playing days, if his resolute defiance of the customary list of questions is any guide! As it happens, most of the things we ask each week are fully answered in his article, so nothing is lost. And we have split his engrossing piece into two, making for a longer section dealing with his history as a fan* but starting with his comparisons of Sunderland and the Baggies …….

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On our websiteWBAZONE (which is where Salut! Sunderland found Paul; check it out) – Sunderland are often singled out as an example of the kind of money required to outlay in terms of both transfer fees and wages in order to have a decent chance at Premiership consolidation.

Thoughts on your (newly departed) manager varied widely with some seeing him as a “Keeganesque” type manager likely to walk when under pressure while others saw him carved from the same piece of granite as his mentor Alex Ferguson and here for the long haul.


I guess those with the Keeganesque take were on the money.

Both teams are lacking in confidence at the moment and it seems that while our styles of play are very different our weaknesses are very similar.

After a fantastic battling display at Old Trafford, the pressure will be on the home side to attack and take three points from what already looks like a crucial fixture.

You have made some really good signings over the last couple of years with Jones and Richardson being possibly the best. On the other hand money has undoubtedly been wasted on the likes of Chopra (Earnshaw Mark II) and Gordon and you’ve probably paid too much money for average players.

Whether or not you can avoid the drop will depend largely on the quality of Keane’s replacement. Unless we can sign two quality players in January (particularly a striker) I think our future looks bleak.

There are many links between the clubs.

Recently paper talk was that Whitehead was on our radar. I’m aware he took some stick after the Bolton performance, but whenever I’ve seen him he has been a genuine wholehearted player even if his ability is limited.

We need a quality midfielder who can tackle and that has leadership qualities he almost fits the bill but not quite.

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Richardson – pictured by Peadar O’Sullivan -on the other hand is a quality player when fit. He was definitely the difference in our “great escape” season bringing badly needed power and pace to our midfield. It was a major disappointment that we failed to sign him I guess our loss is your gain.

For me having been raised in the Midlands the real Derby is with Villa. Having been surrounded by Villa fans at every school I attended, and living for sometime in their heartland, there is absolutely no question which club I most love us to beat.

One thing being in a minority in your youth does is build character and prepare you for the challenges of supporting one of the countrys most frustrating teams! Bizarrely my son considers the Wolves game far more of a derby but that has much more to do with the geography of his upbringing and the fact that recently Wolves have been more frequent visitors than Villa due to our yoyo status.

The most recent link between the clubs is the superb Kevin Phillips. I well remember a game against Sunderland in our first promotion season. We completely ran the show and could easily have scored four or five, but the game ended in a 2-2 draw thanks to SKP’s two shots, two goals. I always considered him a quality striker and he did an absolutely fantastic job for us. Not replacing him during the summer window may well prove the difference between survival and relegation for ourselves.

The club vs country debate holds no dilemma for me. I rarely if ever watch England games and go along with Frank Skinner’s take that our club will always come first and for me by some considerable distance.

The Stadium of Light is a superb ground and often a happy hunting ground for ourselves. I remember the game during our promotion season (2003 I think) when Lloyd Dyer sprinted the length of the pitch to give Koumas the ball that won us the game after being under the cosh for long periods. I was approached on the way to work the next day by a Mackem taxi driver who insisted that even Dick Turpin wore a mask!


My son Mitch, then 15 (he’s now approaching 18), trained and played there when Mick McCarthy was in charge as he was recommended by Mick’s cousin who was also his coach.
At the time he was on the fringe of the England boys (disabilities) team as he is profoundly deaf but unfortunately got sent off in a trial game having scored twice and was considered too volatile.
Liam Lawrence took him under his wing (he still insists Lawrence uses the corner techniques he showed him!) and therefore will always have a soft spot for your club. He still speaks fondly of MM and Liam and to a lesser extent Julio Arca although he felt the remainder of the players were very aloof. He found the training facilities and ground second only to Man Us which is quite a compliment.

Having dated a girl from South Shields for over two years. I know the area and people well and there’s no doubt it’s a great friendly place to visit. We are travelling to the game with two Mackems from our town (yes, there are plenty of you even here!) who saw us last season at Peterborough and thought we played top class football. It should be a lively trip and the journey home could prove interesting!!


My Prediction: Sunderland 1 West Bromwich Albion 1

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King Charlie the Great? No. Charlie the greatest

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CHARLIE HURLEY: “THE GREATEST CENTRE HALF THE WORLD HAS EVER SEEN”...Mark Metcalf (Sportsbooks)

Mark Metcalf will, I hope, forgive me for having started his book on Charlie Hurley on page 187.

It was not that I had no interest in the earlier chapters.

When I got round to them, I devoured them, too. Metcalf offers a comprehensive account of Charlie’s early life and cannot be faulted for lack of detail about a brilliant career played predominantly outside the top flight. But what I really wanted to – had to – read first was Chapter Thirteen: Bust-up with Baxter.

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Soapbox: nearly but not quite

Soapbox
It was an extraordinary game in which Sunderland defied the might of Old Trafford for nearly 91 minutes until a lucky deflection, followed by the kindest of rebounds, gave Man United their winner. Forget Setanta, this is the Salut! Sunderland analysis: forget Craig Burley’s hard-of-thinking bombast, trust Pete Sixsmith to do the story justice…..

We nearly got away with it. For 90 minutes, the alleged giants of world football had huffed and puffed and threatened to blow our house down. Just when we thought we had seen off the big bad wolf, they had one last blow and with the help of a friendly post they got the winner that they probably deserved on the balance of play.

But didn’t we do well? The game plan was dead simple: stop them scoring by getting all 10 outfield players behind the ball and then if we get it, kick it away as far as we can.

It reminded me of games of Attack and Defence we played as kids, where the object of the game was to prevent a score. After a period of being a defender and hoofing the ball on to the Black Path, you would then become attackers and try to score a goal past Dennis Robinson or John Taylor – or in my case, hoof the ball into the adjacent tennis courts. It was a “skill” that United’s attackers replicated perfectly.

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Soapbox: the Highs and Lows of the Keane 100

Soapbox

One Hundred Years to the day since we beat Newcastle 9-1 at St James’s*, Pete Sixsmith takes a look back at Roy Keane’s One Hundred Days at Sunderland ….
(* scroll down or click here to read Colin Randall’s heart-warming account of that famous victory)

As the Keane era ends, I thought it might be a good idea (and a chance to recycle some old comments) to look back at the Roy Keane Highs and Lows. Things that stand out for me are, in no particular order:

Derby and Leeds (away); I think it made us realise that we had a manager who could bring in decent players (Miller, Kavanagh, Wallace, Connolly) and that he could encourage them to play simple pass and move football. Great away followings too.

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Top flight football’s record away win: NUFC 1 SAFC 9

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We all need cheering up just now…..so forget, for a moment, the current predicament of our club, the exit of Roy Keane and our logical fears about tomorrow’s prospects at Old Trafford. Instead, let us transport ourselves back to the St James’ Park of exactly 100 years ago today. On Dec 5 1908, as every schoolboy ought to know, Sunderland thrashed the Mags 9-1. And it was all Steve Bennett or Rob Styles’s doing, firing up the Lads for a second-half blitz by giving Newcastle a dodgy penalty on half-time. This is how I have reported it for The National in Abu Dhabi (it appeared yesterday so I have changed “tomorrow” to “today”)……

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Famous win is still tale of the century

No member of the Toon Army, as supporters of Newcastle United like to be called, will thank me for drawing wider attention to the centenary of one of the most momentous league games in English football history.

But then, since I follow their north-eastern rivals Sunderland, Newcastle fans would probably feel disinclined to thank me for anything.

All the same, duty obliges me to record that 100 years ago today, having made the short journey to Newcastle, Sunderland did not so much beat the Magpies as pulverise them.

Newcastle 1 Sunderland 9. That was how it finished, in front of 56,000 fans with many more locked out. And it remains the joint biggest away victory in the English top flight, what we now call the Premier League (Cardiff City were walloped by the same score at home to Wolverhampton Wanderers in 1955).

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Has Keane gone? Yes

Following our report of the overnight rumour, which we didn’t want to believe, Sunderland have officially confirmed Roy Keane’s departure …

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Has Keane gone?

Just one more rumour? Maybe, but it reached Salut! Sunderland from someone described as a “good contact” and goes like …

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