Sunderland Echo

Neil's reaction when asked about Sunderland regrets

- James Copley james.copley@nationalwo­rld.com

The latest Sunderland news comes from their former head coach Alex Neil after he was asked if he had any regrets this season.

Neil produced an in-depth response when asked if he regretted leaving Sunderland earlier this season.

Neil joined Sunderland in the January of 2021, taking over from Lee Johnson after the now-Hibernian manager was sacked following a 6-0 thrashing away to Bolton Wanderers.

The former Norwich City coach guided Sunderland into the play-offs and then to a win against Sheffield Wednesday over two legs in the semi-finals, and then a memorable 2-0 win against Wycombe Wanderers at Wembley.

Neil started the season in the Sunderland hot seat, but left in controvers­ial fashion to join Championsh­ip rivals Stoke City back in August, which led to the appointmen­t of Tony Mowbray.

Speaking to the Stoke Sentinal, Neil was asked this question: The elephant in the room – or perhaps it would particular­ly be to outsiders – is how Sunderland have done since you left. No regrets?

"No, I'm really, really relaxed about Sunderland in terms of how well they've done. I genuinely am," Neil responded.

"Some people are quite spiteful and some people

want other people to fail because it might look bad on them and all that sort of nonsense. I don't have that at all, I've never had that. My brain doesn't work that way.

"I look at Sunderland and their success – and I want to make clear it’s their success, not my success – but I do take it as a bit of a compliment to me because when you leave a club and the club falls off a cliff, in my opinion, I think you're responsibl­e for that.

"You're the one that's done the bulk of that work.

"But equally, if a club goes

on and it's sustainabl­e and it does well and it's still competing, you’ve sort of helped it on its way.

"I've been extremely proud of my time at Sunderland.

"I went to a massive club who had been trying to get out that league for a long time and I managed to help it do that.

"I thought we gave them a great, solid base.

"We signed some really good players in the summer and I think we gave them like an excellent pre-season and we got them set up.

"However, from the point of me leaving, Tony and the players and the club and everybody there have done a remarkable job getting them for a team that has just been promoted into the play-offs and they deserve all the credit.

"I had hoped they would win the play-offs, genuinely, because I like all the lads there.

"I've got a lot of affinity with the people there.

"I know the fans weren’t best pleased with me when

I left and that’s fine, I get it.

"But I genuinely hope they do well. I’ve got absolutely no gripes.

"If anything, it makes me even more determined to make this work because I really do believe in what we're doing here.

"I believe in the project that I came to try to build and I've got no regrets in because I do believe the bigger picture.

"Not that we need to do better than Sunderland, but that I believe that I can make this work and make this a really successful club."

 ?? ?? Former Sunderland head coach Alex Neil, now of Stoke City.
Former Sunderland head coach Alex Neil, now of Stoke City.

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