Sunderland Echo

‘Lots of work to do’ admits Neil after Cats held in his first game

- Phil Smith phi.smith@jpimedia.co.uk @phil__smith

New Sunderland head coach Alex Neil admits he has a ‘lot of work to do’ after his first Black Cats game ended in a 1-1 draw at AFC Wimbledon.

Neil felt the host’s first-half penalty, awarded for a handball by Callum Doyle, was ‘extremely harsh’, but conceded his side ultimately did not do enough for the three points.

“I thought the penalty was extremely harsh, first of all,” Neil said.

“It wasn't travelling towards goal, he’s a yard away, and it’s not as if he’s making himself bigger to block a goalbound effort. Extremely harsh.

“I thought Alex Pritchard produced a moment of quality again, but we’re disappoint­ed with the naivety of our play at times.

“I thought there were mistakes and errors that we wouldn’t expect.

“We had a couple of good moments, some good chances, but not enough moments.

“It’s a platform in terms of, we've lost three in a row and that’s a point, but if we want to be in the mix come the end of the season then we’ve got a lot of work to do.”

Neil has had only one 40-minute session with his players to date, which makes this week key.

The Scot says, as well as a lack of confidence, he sees signs of fatigue in a youthful squad that he needs to address.

“We’ve got to get our ideas into them next week,” he said.

“What struck me about that team was that I think there were seven players under the age of 22, so there’s not a lot of experience there.

“There’s also a gap in terms of, experience­d players have come into the club, but they’ve not had many minutes, so they’re coming from a standing start.

“Then you have a lot of lads in their first year and at the minute, a lot of them look tired.

“Ultimately, we haven’t got a huge of amount of options, so that’s something I need to have a good look at.

“I need to get minutes into these experience­d players, because they are key players if I can get them going. The difficulty I’ve got is that I’ve got very limited time in which to do that.

“We’ve got quality, but we’re young and naive in certain areas of the pitch, They have quality too, but it’s about game understand­ing, knowledge, which comes from repetition, matches, and that will be a focus for us without overloadin­g them.

“I don’t know if it’s fatigue, or lack of fitness, when it became a transition game in the last 20 minutes, that should suit us with the quality we’ve got.

“I didn’t think it looked as if we had enough legs to get about the pitch and become really dangerous on the break as well.

“Confidence is a massive thing, too, obviously.

“We’ve got to understand where these boys are in their developmen­t.

“If you look at Ross Stewart, he’s probably not played as many games as this in a season and we’ve still got another third to go.

“So that’s tough for him and he looked a bit jaded, which is why I took him off.

“We’ve got to protect these boys, so that we try and freshen them up for these games physically and mentally.

“These next few games are going to be really important.”

 ?? ?? Sunderland boss Alex Neil, centre, overseeing his side’s warm-up, fears his team look fatigued
Sunderland boss Alex Neil, centre, overseeing his side’s warm-up, fears his team look fatigued

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