September 28, 2024

Sunderland: 4 academy products set to become future stars at the Stadium of  Light

Watford boss Tom Cleverley confirms quadruple injury blow and one doubt ahead of Sunderland clash

Watford manager Tom Cleverley has confirmed that goalkeeper Daniel Bachmann and defender Francisco Sierralta both face relatively lengthy stints on the sidelines ahead of this weekend’s Championship clash with Sunderland.

Last week’s loss to Plymouth ticked all the boxes for those who unironically believe in ‘Typical Sunderland’ being a real force in the universe, rather than just our version of the same cynicism that most football fans feel about their own club, regardless of the colors.

Top-of-the-league coming unstuck against a poor side who had looked shambolic up until then? Check. The Manager of the Month Award curse hitting a modern, forward-thinking coach, forcing him to lose against an unconvincing counterpart who spent the international break playing in Legends games and crooning in karaoke bars? Check. A string of errors from otherwise reliable stalwarts in Sunderland’s team? Check, and then some.

Sunderland could finally replace Stewart by signing 17-goal speedster

Having thankfully swerved the mammoth trip to Devon this time around, I was looking forward to the chance to see the Lads bounce back against our old friends, the Boro.

The build-up to (and indeed the aftermath of) the game brought the usual strange discourse from that lot. Sunderland fans are used to attendances being used as a stick to beat us with, mostly from Geordies who seem to believe that an average attendance of 41,000 for a 49k stadium equates to “twenty-seven thousand empty seats” (as their hilariously off-the-mark chant goes). But this time, we were bafflingly told that the high number of tickets sold proved the game was, in fact, a derby.

Next, they’ll be telling us that our players trying so hard means we actually care about Boro.

Sunderland: Mowbray has exciting Ross Stewart heir in the academy

If Olympic medals were awarded for mental gymnastics, both of our nearest neighbors would definitely be regulars on the podium.

Anyway, it was an early start as we jumped in the car on a drizzly grey morning in Chester-le-Street. We passed a small fleet of Boro coaches, likely filled with fans expecting the same meek Sunderland performance they’d enjoyed for the last fifteen years or so. Luckily, we knew that this season’s squad is made of sterner stuff, and there was a real sense of anticipation rather than dread when we arrived in the city center.

Sunderland: Mowbray has exciting Ross Stewart heir in the academy

After a couple of early pints in Street Bar, we crossed the Wearmouth Bridge, looking west toward the soon-to-be-completed footbridge that will make getting around the city on matchdays much easier. It might sound trite, but these small steps forward all contribute to the positive atmosphere around the club right now.

We just missed the fan display by a couple of minutes, which looked spectacular, but we took our seats ready to cheer on the Lads as they attacked the Roker End.

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