Sunderland Echo

Gray on Donald & Louis-Dreyfus, Maja's exit & Cooke's redundancy

- James Copley james.copley@jpimedia.co.uk

Striker Phil Gray clearly still holds a torch for Sunderland.

The Northern Irishman speaks about his old club with a fire and passion which has not diluted 25-years after his departure from Roker Park.

Gray, 52, left Wearside in 1996 with Sunderland having just been promoted to the Premier League.

A quarter of a century later and the club are competing in League One for a third straight season – an unpreceden­ted low in the Black Cats’ illustriou­s history.

Indeed, recent failings have pushed questions of identity to the forefront of Sunderland fans’ consciousn­ess, something unthinkabl­e in Gray's day.

That issue, then, will surely be one of the key areas new owner Kyril LouisDreyf­us will look to address as the club finally embarks on a new course following the Stewart Donald era.

But what can the 23-yearold Frenchman – who is estimated to have a trust fund worth more than £2billion – rebuild Sunderland around?

“The supporters,” Gray answers instantly.

“We always knew if the support was behind us on a cold day at Roker Park that they would urge us on.

“When we used to go to places like Reading there would be 3,000 supporters and it was absolutely fantastic.

“The support is a massive loss for Sunderland at the minute, especially at home, it’s a big loss for the Sunderland supporters not to be there home and away.”

Another debate that has surrounded the club during recent campaigns is whether the weight of expectatio­n from supporters has become a hindering factor.

Has Sunderland's passionate fan base placed too much pressure on their team?

Gray, however, positions responsibi­lity firmly on the shoulders of the Sunderland players.

“My first 10 games at Sunderland, I didn’t score,” the Belfast-born former Tottenham striker remembers.

“I had the car crash and all that, but I’m not making excuses.

“I was also staying in a hotel, but I should have been looking after myself better than I did.

“There’s always a little bit of pressure but it doesn’t matter which club you’re playing for, there’s always pressure to do your best.

“It is hard because everyone wants you to do well. If you weren’t doing well then people would get on your back a little bit.

“But then again, they have the right to if you’re not playing well, but that shouldn’t bother players, they shouldn’t be thinking about that.

“As soon as the whistle goes you should be concentrat­ing on the game.”

With Sunderland now in a new era with enthusiast­ic ownership, Gray was quick to point out past failings from former majority stakeholde­r Donald.

The businessma­n purchased the club from American tycoon Ellis Short in May 2018.

However, after several public relation disasters and some questionab­le decisions, Donald stepped down as chairman two-years later.

At the heart of fan unrest – which involved a co-ordinated protest from several supporter groups – lay concerns around the club’s finances, younger players departing and the failure to win promotion out of League One.

After stepping down as chairman in July last year, Donald publicly placed his 74% stake in the club up for sale.

The club finally changed hands in February 2021 with Louis-Dreyfus gaining control following a long process.

Another decision under the former regime that went down badly with fans, however, was the departure of John Cooke, a popular former Sunderland player and long-term kitman.

Cooke, speaking in December, said it was 'very disappoint­ing' to have been redundant 'without even a mention’ that he had left.

The decision prompted an outcry, with disgruntle­d fans setting up a crowdfundi­ng page which was supported by former club figures Peter Reid and Thomas Sorensen.

And Gray – who worked alongside Cooke during his time on Wearside from 1993 to 1996 – still finds his redundancy a bitter pill to swallow.

“Unbelievab­le,” Gray, who netted 34 times in 115 league appearance­s for Sunderland, said. “I can’t believe Cookie has gone.

“I mean cost-cutting with the kitman? Come on, be real… with players who are earning an absolute fortune.

“I think in our day we would have chipped in and kept him and told the club to hold on a second.

“You can’t get rid of someone like Cookie. He's been there 30 years, I think he was there seven or eight years before I was there.”

Indeed, the club’s decision to make Cooke redundant sent ripples through the Academy of Light.

Cooke’s son and Sunderland youth teamer Jay Turner-Cooke took to social media to voice his displeasur­e, blasting the club as having ‘no class, no loyalty, no respect.’

Following an investigat­ion into his conduct by Sunderland, Turner-Cooke was snapped up by North East rivals Newcastle United.

“With his son leaving the club,” Gray added. “They’ve bitten off their nose to spite their face.”

Unfortunat­ely, Turner-Cooke is not the first hot prospect to depart the

Academy of Light for pastures new.

Joe Hugill left for Manchester United and is excelling at youth level alongside Logan Pye.

Sam Greenwood finds himself at Leeds United via Arsenal, while Bali Mumba was sold to Norwich City.

Ethan Robson, now at Blackpool, and Hull City’s George Honeyman were also allowed to leave the club.

Add to the list the names of Josh Maja, now scoring for Fulham, alongside Luca Stephenson and Luke Hewitson, who were both poached by Liverpool, and you could be forgiven for stating that Sunderland have lost a golden generation of first-team players.

“The club has let a lot of young lads go,” Gray bemoaned.

“The young lad Josh Maja who went to Bordeaux but has now come back to Fulham.

“He did great at Sunderland and made a name for himself but sometimes you have to push the boat out and keep him.

“Letting him go and bringing in Will Grigg – was that the right thing to do? It’s things like that.

“With transfers, you’re always going to get good ones and bad ones.

But could Donald and Sunderland, in Gray’s opinion, have done more to keep that crop of talented players at the club for a longer period of time?

“Sunderland are always going to be a selling club for the big boys, you look at my other club Luton and they are the same.”

“In my day, we had Craig Russell, Martin Smith, Micky Gray, Dickie Ord, who all eventually left.

“Now it’s not very often that a player would stay for eight or nine years now like Bally and Benno.

“It’s still massively dishearten­ing for the supporters to see young lads getting shipped on and doing really well for other clubs.”

Much looks set to change for the better on Wearside but Gray’s words form a poignant reminder of past failures that Sunderland’s new owners cannot afford to repeat.

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Newcastle head coach Steve Bruce is facing up to the prospect of overseeing a fight for Premier League survival without his three most dangerous players.

With 10-goal leading scorer Callum Wilson already sidelined for several more weeks, Bruce saw Miguel Almiron and Allan Saint-Maximin limp off the pitch during Saturday evening’s 1-1 draw with Wolves.

Both will undergo scans as medics attempt to assess the extent of the damage, but with the pair and Wilson having contribute­d 16 of the Magpies 27 league goals so far this season, any prolonged absence would come as a major blow.

Asked if his team could score goals and win games without the trio, Bruce replied: “We’re going to have to if that is the case, we’re going to have to find a way.

“Our top goalscorer last year only scored six goals and we managed to find a way and get some results.

“It’s been pretty brutal to us in that respect to our big players, so we’ll have to get on with it and accept it and take on the challenge.”

Newcastle’s lack of goals was once again highlighte­d as they failed to make the most of the chances they created in an encouragin­g performanc­e and ultimately had to rely upon a remarkable save by returning keeper Martin Dubravka to emerge with even a point from the

game.

After Almiron had hit the post in the first half, skipper Jamaal Lascelles headed them in front seven minutes after the break only for Ruben Neves to level with 17 minutes remaining.

However, they should have regained their lead in the closing stages when substitute Jacob Murphy carved his way into the penalty area

before squaring for £40million striker Joelinton, whose shot hit defender Romain Saiss on the line and somehow squirmed over the bar.

Head coach Bruce said: “I think he should score. It was a great run by Murphy and it was a big, big chance with, what was it, seven minutes to go?

“I’ve just seen it back again and it’s a big, huge opportunit­y that we missed.”

Newcastle’s disappoint­ment would have been compounded in stoppage-time had Dubravka, making his first league appearance of the season, not managed to divert substitute Fabio Silva’s header on to the underside of the crossbar and away.

The Magpies remain firmly entrenched in a relegation fight as a result, while Wolves have eased themselves into a comfortabl­e mid-table position with an unbeaten five-game run.

Manager Nuno Espirito Santo said: “I always believe that there’s space to improve and we have a lot of details that we should improve.

"But the reaction and the approach game after game pleases me and gives me the belief that we should improve in our game, and we are on the way and working hard for it.

“Our expectatio­ns are high and we know that we have talented players and we have to improve them.

"We are working very, very hard on that.

"The boys are giving all that they have, so we will do it.”

 ??  ?? Kyril Louis-Dreyfus.
Kyril Louis-Dreyfus.
 ??  ?? Newcastle United head coach Steve Bruce on the touchline at St James’ Park.
Newcastle United head coach Steve Bruce on the touchline at St James’ Park.

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