Sunday Sun

Mowbray crossing his fingers O’nien available

- By James Hunter SAFC Writer james.hunter@reachplc.com

TONY Mowbray is banking on Luke O’nien being available for Sunderland’s trip to West Bromwich Albion today – but admits there are no guarantees with the defender’s baby now overdue, and the club will have a car on standby in case he needs to return home in a hurry.

O’nien and his wife Georgia were expecting their new arrival earlier this week and Mowbray allowed the player to stay at home on Wearside over Easter rather than make the long six-hour trip for the Black Cats’ game at Cardiff City on Easter Monday in case the baby arrived early. The 28-year-old played in the home games against Birmingham City last Saturday and then Huddersfie­ld Town on Tuesday, but the Black Cats now face another lengthy away trip when they head to The Hawthorns for a Sunday lunchtime kick-off. The situation has become all the more urgent with skipper Danny Batth suffering a season-ending injury against the Terriers that leaves O’nien as the club’s only regular senior centre-half.

Both player and head coach are hoping the baby arrives safely before the game and it may be that he does not travel with the team and instead travels in a club car to the Midlands to reduce the amount of time he is away from home and to allow him to return home if necessary. Mowbray is keeping his fingers crossed that O’nien will be clear to play against the Baggies but says, ultimately, the player and his family will come first.

“We’ve got the situation with Luke O’nien and his wife,” said Mowbray. “The birth hasn’t happened yet so we have to hope that that doesn’t create an extra probem for us.

“We’re trying to put some contingenc­y plans in place – we were thinking ‘helicopter’ to be honest, but I don’t think we will be doing that. I certainly won’t be paying for it!

“Luke just needs to be clear in his mind that he can get to somewhere pretty quickly. We need to put some contingenc­y plans in place, even if it’s just a club car so that if, at any moment, he needs to leave then he needs to leave – that’s what would happen.

“Rather than him driving his car down, we’ll have a club car available for him to leave when it is necessary.

“I’m not sure yet whether he is getting on the bus with us or not, but I have spoken to him about the urgency of needing him to play in that one-and-a-half hour window.

“We need him to play but, if things don’t allow that to happen and stuff happens around the time we need him, as I’ve always said, his family will come first and he will be allowed to go and be with his wife... We all hope that the one-and-a-half hour window on Sunday afternoon will be clear one way or another – either a successful birth in the next 24-36 hours or, or still waiting at 4pm on Sunday.”

We’re trying to put some contingenc­y plans in place – we

were thinking ‘helicopter’ to be

honest

 ?? ?? Tony Mowbray
Tony Mowbray

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