Sunderland Echo

MICK: I FEEL FOR CHRIS

IPSWICH’S FORMER SUNDERLAND BOSS SPELLS OUT DIFFICULTI­ES FACING CHRIS COLEMAN

- By Phil Smith philip.smith@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @Phil__Smith

Mick McCarthy says Chris Coleman’s job rescuing Sunderland is like ‘trying to stop an oil tanker with a canoe paddle’.

Sunderland won the Championsh­ip under McCarthy’s management in 2004/05 and the 58-yearold, who brings his midtable Ipswich Town side to the Stadium of Light today, still has fond memories of his time on Wearside.

He told BBC Radio Suffolk: “I had a fabulous time at Sunderland, from a tough start.

“I was just thinking about Chris going in there, it’s like trying to stop an oil tanker with a canoe paddle, I can tell you. “It’s hard work. “But it’s a great club, great people, fabulous people.

“When I wanted to sign a player, I would show them round everywhere then into the directors’ box and out into the stadium, it is just brilliant, mind-blowing.

“I don’t know what to think of it [Sunderland’s decline] actually.

“They’ve been on the brink for so many years but have been able to get someone to come in, wave a magic wand and keep them up.

“The following season they’ve been back in that position, so I do feel for Chris. It is hard when things aren’t going well.

“He’s a very good guy and proved his worth in Wales.

“Look, the bigger the club, the more opinions, the more fans, noise, media, it can be really tough to manage.”

McCarthy went on to win another second-tier title with Wolves and, while he has brought stability to Ipswich during his five years there, another promotion has proved elusive.

Coleman has come back into club management from an internatio­nal post, just as McCarthy did when arrived on Wearside soon after leaving his role as boss of the Republic of Ireland.

McCarthy says the division has changed beyond all recognitio­n since then and is much tougher to succeed in.

He said: “It has changed since I went from internatio­nal management to the Championsh­ip.

“The league is better, better players, better managers maybe, different ideas and ways of playing.

“It has got better since I went in with Sunderland in 2003 and Wolves in 2006.

“Maybe there were more players around that I could get – Gary Breen, Dean Whitehead, Liam Lawrence – players you could nick in and get, motivate. Michael Kightly with Wolves, Matt Jarvis.

“Are those players around anymore? I’m not sure.”

 ??  ?? Ipswich boss Mick McCarthy.
Ipswich boss Mick McCarthy.

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