Players O’Neill wanted. He got the payers and dished-up some of the most turgid football I’ve ever seen.
He had frontlines of Larsson, Sessegnon, Fletcher/Bendtner and Johnson and served us that.
Short made a lot of bad decisions but backed O’Neill and his football was only topped by Parkinson for its negativity imo.
He sanctioned two big signings in Fletcher and Johnson. I wouldn't say he backed him a great deal. O'Neill had said the squad needed major surgery - it did - but he wasn't given the means to do it.
Roll on the summer after his sacking, and we let that clown De Fanti in and we do all sorts of bad business.
Fletch and Johnson at least were bloody good signings for us.
Alfie N'Diaye was decent enough too, and we got our money back on him.
Danny Graham is the stick people often beat O'Neil with, but at £5m he cost buttons, and in the Premier League, you get what you pay for. We needed a body, and he'd done more than ok at Swansea, so on paper, it was worth the punt.
I don't believe O'Neill was a negative manager, or that he set out to be negative. What he was aware of is how soft we were. And we were soft. He knew that any point we were susceptible to being rolled over and having our bellies tickled.
Our back four was a mess. Brown in and out the side, couldn't train, coming to the end. That last season under O'Neill, he didn't even play.
Bramble - do I even need to expand?
Bardsley for the most part was in one of his half arsed periods. We had Craig Gardner filling in a number of weeks - that gave us a little more attacking impetus, but he wasn't exactly a solid defender. Danny Rose was a decent loanee.
In midfield, we were without Cattermole for most of the season. We could be a soft touch with him in the side, without him it was even worse. David Vaughan, weak as piss.
I liked Larsson, but there was plenty who didn't. And he was more effective with the likes of Cattermole alongside.
The way we absolutely capitulated at Aston Villa was precisely why O'Neill approached games in a certain manner. And it's not so different to what Poyet realised when he walked through the door. And if we fast forward a decade, it's not so different to Regis Le Bris' approach either.
Been fantastic everywhere he's been, except here.
Typical Sunderland
31.8% win ratio in the prem for us - which is better than most.
I think a big problem at the time is that our expectation weren't aligned with the quality of the squad in front of us.
My biggest concern about us going forward from the brilliant season we've had so far, is the fans losing sight of where we're actually at again.
We've got form for it.