Sunderland Echo

SUNDERLAND SWING FROM DEEPEST LOW TO NEW HIGH

BLACK CATS HAVE ENDURED AN UNPRECEDEN­TED YEAR OF DESPAIR, REBIRTH AND HOPE

- Richard.mennear@jpimedia.co.uk Twitter: @RichMennea­r

2018 will live long in the memory of Sunderland AFC supporters, from the lowest of lows to the incredible wave of positivity the club now finds itself riding.

Twelve months ago Sunderland were battling the drop, confidence at an alltime low amongst the squad and the long-suffering fans.

An absent owner at the helm in Ellis Short who had decided enough was enough when it came to pumping the same level of money into the club.

He wanted out. Sunderland fans wanted him out. It had long-since turned toxic, with the Black Cats struggling to win on home soil in front of those pink, faded seats.

They had come to symbolise all that was wrong with the club.

Despite his best efforts, Chris Coleman was unable to steer Sunderland away from a humiliatin­g relegation to League One.

The club on its knees, with huge debts and mounting financial problems and a squad crippled by overpaid, underperfo­rming players.

Then, in the blink of an eye, everything changed; Coleman sacked, Short sold to Stewart Donald, Jack Ross appointed as new manager a few weeks later.

Ever since, Sunderland has been on an upward curve; 12 new players arrived, Ross quickly forged a winning mentality, there was financial stability and the buzz was back on Wearside, with promotionc­hasing SAFC well placed in League One. Oh, and those pink seats replaced.

We’ve picked out some of the key moments and players from 2018.

Sunday, April 29, will go down as a pivotal day in the history of Sunderland AFC. Coleman was sacked shortly before news broke Short had sold the club debt-free to Donald in a £40million deal. It was a dramatic day; the Sunderland fanbase had renewed hoped and optimism. The new owners promised fresh investment, a fresh outlook, more engagement and they have delivered on all fronts as they aim to win promotion back to the Championsh­ip at the first time of asking. Credit to Short for the deal, ensuring SAFC was debt-free removed a huge financial burden and allowed the new owners to get on with the job of rebuilding the club quickly.

Josh Maja. Has to be. The 19-year-old striker has scored 13 goals this season, 12 in League One.

With Charlie Wyke and Duncan Watmore out injured and Jerome Sinclair yet to find his feet, Maja had to shoulder the responsibi­lity. And he has done so magnificen­tly.

Clinical in the penalty area, he has a huge future ahead, hopefully on Wearside.

George Honeyman. Granted the bar was set low for last season given the club suffered a successive relegation but Honeyman was one of the standout players last term.

Commitment and passion couldn’t be faulted, highlighte­d in the Netflix documentar­y.

And he has carried that into this season, complete with the armband. Honeyman has his critics and there is still much to improve but in terms of players here for the duration of 2018, Honeyman has been the standout

 ??  ?? Josh Maja, Lynden Gooch and George Honeyman have been Sunderland’s best players in 2018.
Josh Maja, Lynden Gooch and George Honeyman have been Sunderland’s best players in 2018.

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