Sunderland Echo

WILSON SO KEEN TO MAKE HIS MARC AGAIN

SUNDERLAND DEFENDER DETERMINED TO MAKE UP FOR LOST TIME AND GET SEASON MOVING AS THE BLACK CATS

- By Richard Mennear richard.mennear@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @RichMennea­rJP

Marc Wilson moved to Sunderland for the good of his career – and is determined to be a success on Wearside as he closes in on a return to action.

The 30-year-old defender missed the Preston North End and QPR draws with a groin injury, but boss Simon Grayson hopes to have him back training ahead of Saturday’s trip to Brentford.

Versatile Wilson has endured a difficult start to life at the Stadium of Light, with the club struggling in the Championsh­ip relegation zone.

The former Bournemout­h defender signed on deadline day, penning a deal until the end of the season and he insists that dropping down a division wasn’t a factor.

He simply wanted to play football again and revive his career, having played just 19 games in the last two seasons for Stoke City, Bournemout­h, West Brom and Ireland.

“The most important thing for me was to play firstteam football again,” Wilson told the Echo.

“I just needed games under my belt again. That was my main focus in coming to Sunderland.

“I feel it within myself that I have the hunger back – it hasn’t been there for the last year.

“I moved for my own career – I needed to move out and play football.

“I had a few other clubs that were interested. Obviously I sat down with the family and we had a chat about it, where I wanted to go and how I needed to achieve it. “We decided that Sunderland was the place to come. “This is a very positive move for me, a great club and great history behind them. “I am hungry to do well.” Wilson, an internatio­nal team-mate of John O’Shea, Aiden McGeady and Darron Gibson, has struggled for form in his five appearance­s before injury struck midway through the recent 5-2 hammering at Ipswich Town. He was one of three central defenders to miss the 1-1 draw with QPR last weekend, with Lamine Kone absent through illness and Tyias Browning sidelined by a muscle injury. It meant Grayson paired O’Shea up with right-back Billy Jones at the heart of the Sunderland defence. Grayson will be hoping for defensive reinforcem­ents at Brentford, with the manager hopeful of Wilson returning to training by the back end of this week.

The Sunderland firstteam squad were on a day off yesterday, but they return to the Academy of Light today to continue preparatio­ns ahead of the trip to face Dean Smith’s Brentford side, 18th in the Championsh­ip.

Wilson, who describes Sunderland boss Grayson as “different class”, is now settled in the area, having moved into an apartment.

Sunderland now need a settled run of positive results if they are to quickly turn the dismal start to life in the sec-

‘I have the hunger back, it hasn’t been there for the last year.’

 ??  ?? Marc Wilson defends against Kamil Grosicki in last month’s 1-1 Championsh­ip draw at Hull. Pic by Frank Reid.
Marc Wilson defends against Kamil Grosicki in last month’s 1-1 Championsh­ip draw at Hull. Pic by Frank Reid.

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