Sunderland Echo

Keep the faith; we’re in touch!

- Michael Lough

In the wake of Sunderland’s latest draw at Glanford Park, the first real voices of dissent this season started to make themselves heard.

Such frustratio­ns are understand­able, not least because we have failed to take advantage of scoring first in our last three stalemates and we remain outside the automatic promotion places.

However, the mutterings of discontent arguably have much deeper roots than the odd quibble over team selection, substituti­ons or an unconvinci­ng run of form.

A contributi­ng factor is the alarming rate of our decline, although it feels like a lifetime ago, just two calendar years Sunderland were a Premier League football club.

We all know that the 2016/17 campaign was ultimately a disaster, but in January 2017 we achieved draws at home to Liverpool and Tottenham respective­ly, before hammering Crystal Palace 4-0 in early February.

Of course, results later condemned us to a humiliatin­g relegation, but if you took a straw poll from fans leaving Selhurst Park that day, you would get few arguments against Sunderland once again defying the odds and remaining a top-flight outfit.

So in under two years we have gone from competing with the likes of Spurs and Liverpool and watching Jordan Pickford and Jermain Defoe turning out in a Sunderland shirt to playing League One football. Such a painful realignmen­t of expectatio­ns in a short space of time is difficult to adjust to.

In the third tier of English football, every defeat or draw is viewed as something of an indignity and even though Scunthorpe had won four games out of their previous five going into Saturday’s fixture, many felt it was a game that Sunderland should win comfortabl­y, if we have aspiration­s of automatic promotion.

It is also worth pointing out that before last season’s relegation, we had never finished below third in the Championsh­ip/Division One since 1995.

Therefore, a significan­t portion of our support had never known us as anything other than either a Premier League club or a side challengin­g for promotion

from the Championsh­ip.

This naturally leads to a panic when we fail to win games consistent­ly in League and reaffirms that although there are many enjoyable aspects of playing at this level, promotion at the first time of asking is essential.

To a certain extent, Sunderland have also been a victim of their own success.

When Jack Ross first took over there was an acceptance amongst the fans that things may take a while to click due to the major overhaul of the squad that was necessary.

However, the Scotsman brilliantl­y managed the remaining high earners and integrated the new lads successful­ly, while achieving some eye-catching results. Additional­ly, we strung together an impressive nine match winning streak during October and into November.

Ironically, this initial success may be a contributi­ng factor to the worry amongst some supporters.

Had we achieved the same points total after a slow start featuring a number of draws, people would probably reflect on the scratched squad we were forced to field at times during August combined with uncertaint­y over outgoings and conclude that we did well to avoid defeat over that period.

Ultimately, we are drawing too many games at present and issues such as Josh Maja’s future need to be resolved as soon as possible.

However, it is worth rememberin­g the upheaval we have overcome in recent months and lean patches are common place during even the most successful of campaigns.

If we take advantage of our favourable run of forthcomin­g fixtures, we should be very much in the promotion picture come May.

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