Sunderland Echo

GEORGE GIVES

SUNDERLAND TAKE ANOTHER SMALL STEP INTO THE GRAYSON ERA WITH A HARD-EARNED CARABAO CUP VICTORY

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for a player so young.

Keeper Jason Steele was not tested, nor were the defence in front of him for the most part, but it is another stepping stone towards the resilient, competitiv­e side Grayson demands.

He will have been even more encouraged that when his senior attacking players struggled, it was a youngster who stepped up to make the crucial contributi­on.

The manager talked George Honeyman up prematch, more than happy to single him out for praise and even taking the unusual step, particular­ly for a manager who craves being tactically hard to predict, of naming him in the side long before kick-off.

Honeyman, buoyed by his surprise selection last Friday, spoke of wanting to use Sunderland’s increased time and space on the ball to show off his creative talents alongside the now trademark industry.

He did that in some style, starting the move on one flank, forcing his way into the box on the other and chipping the impressive Joe Murphy, once a back-up goalkeeper on Wearside.

The 22-year-old had threatened down the right flank with sub Joel Asoro, the Swede not having the same impact as his academy team-mate ,but who will still have been pleased to make a significan­t contributi­on.

It was a goal worth celebratin­g, and just over 1,000 fans in the away end at Gigg Lane were more than prepared to accept the invitation.

Even if this was far from a classic, it was a win, an alltoo-rare win.

The team showed plenty of endeavour on and off the ball, Darron Gibson making a solid return and showing much stronger box-to-box running that we have seen from him so far at Sunderland.

The Black Cats almost made it 2-0 when Honeyman forced his way into the box late on, only to see Asoro denied by Murphy. It was a move born of persistenc­e, an enthusiasm to hassle and harry, which will have thrilled Grayson.

His team is far from the finished product, but 11 years on from the acrimony of Niall Quinn’s final game in charge at the same ground, he will have been relieved to see his team show their competitiv­e edge again.

The coming months may not grab the headlines as they did in 2006-07, but there are genuine grounds for positivity neverthele­ss.

 ??  ?? George Honeyman chips home Sunderland’s winner against Bury.
George Honeyman chips home Sunderland’s winner against Bury.
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