Daily Mirror

QUINN AND BEAR IT!

Niall looks back at Wembley heartbreak and says: This time, with Neil as manager, it just feels so very different

- BY MIKE WALTERS @MikeWalter­sMGM

SUNDERLAND royalty Niall Quinn thumbed through half a century of Mackems misery at Wembley and predicted: “This time it feels different.”

As a player, Quinn suffered play-off heartbreak after a penalty shootout against Charlton 24 years ago (Quinn scoring in that game, below) after the Black Cats had led the final three times.

And since his spell as chairman at the Stadium of Light, Sunderland have extended their gift for losing major Wembley finals to almost 50 years, dating back to the 1973 FA Cup triumph over Leeds.

But as he surveyed the scene of so many tears on Wearside, Quinn – now 55 – hailed the impact of new manager Alex Neil, a play-off winner with Norwich seven years ago.

“Sunderland’s record here is awful, you can’t ignore it, but there’s something different about this game,” he said.

“I think the impact this manager has had on the club and the team, in a short space of time, has taken everybody by surprise and you can now sense the ambition and the belief around the city.

“The worries of the past melt away because he’s got a team who fight to the end and they keep scoring late goals to get where they

want to go. I just get the feeling that manager has changed the mindset. They are here on merit – they haven’t crawled in through the back door because others have slipped up.

“And it’s all the more encouragin­g because there is a sense of unity, everyone fighting for the cause.

“When Jermain Defoe came back, everyone thought he was going to score the goals that won promotion, but that fizzled out.

“Then there was talk of Roy Keane coming back as manager, and everyone thought he would lead them out of the wilderness again, but that hype fizzled out. Maybe when the new manager wasn’t Roy Keane there was a bit of a lull but Alex Neil had to dig the players out of that lull, and the way he has galvanised the team to play with spirit and belief has been nothing short of exceptiona­l.

“Now they are at Wembley, why would they revert to being scared on the big stage? This Sunderland team will not be pushovers.”

 ?? ?? SUNNY SIDE UP Niall Quinn with play-off trophy at Wembley yesterday
SUNNY SIDE UP Niall Quinn with play-off trophy at Wembley yesterday
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