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Martin O'Neill

Martin Hugh Michael O'Neill, OBE (born 1 March 1952) is a Northern Irish professional football manager and former player who played as a midfielder. After a brief early career in the Irish League, O'Neill moved to England where he spent most of his playing career with Nottingham Forest. He won the First Division title in 1977–78 and the European Cup twice, in 1979 and 1980. He was capped 64 times for the Northern Ireland national football team, also captaining the side at the 1982 World Cup.

Martin O'Neill
OBE
O'Neill in 2023.
Personal information
Full name Martin Hugh Michael O'Neill[1]
Date of birth (1952-03-01) 1 March 1952 (age 71)[2]
Place of birth Kilrea, Northern Ireland
Height 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)[3]
Position(s) Midfielder[2]
Youth career
Rosario
1969–1971 Derry City
Senior career*
Years Team Apps (Gls)
1971 Distillery 7 (3)
1971–1981 Nottingham Forest 285 (48)
1981 Norwich City 11 (1)
1981–1982 Manchester City 13 (0)
1982–1983 Norwich City 55 (11)
1983–1984 Notts County 64 (5)
1984 Chesterfield 0 (0)
1985 Fulham[4] 0 (0)
Total 435 (68)
International career
1971–1984 Northern Ireland 64 (8)
Managerial career
1987–1989 Grantham Town
1989 Shepshed Charterhouse
1990–1995 Wycombe Wanderers
1995 Norwich City
1995–2000 Leicester City
2000–2005 Celtic
2006–2010 Aston Villa
2011–2013 Sunderland
2013–2018 Republic of Ireland
2019 Nottingham Forest
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

O'Neill has managed Grantham Town, Wycombe Wanderers, Norwich City, Leicester City, Celtic, Aston Villa and Sunderland. He guided Leicester City to the Football League Cup final three times, winning twice. As Celtic manager between 2000 and 2005, he led that club to seven trophies including three Scottish Premier League titles and the 2003 UEFA Cup Final. After joining Aston Villa he achieved three consecutive sixth-place finishes in the English Premier League and guided them to the 2010 Football League Cup Final.

He became Republic of Ireland manager in 2013 and led them to qualification for the 2016 UEFA European Championship for the third time in the nation's history, beating the reigning world champions, Germany in the process.[5] He left the role with assistant Roy Keane by "mutual agreement" in November 2018.[6] He was appointed as Nottingham Forest manager in January 2019 but left six months later.

Early life and Gaelic football career edit

O'Neill was born in Kilrea,[7] Derry,Northern Ireland, in 1952. He was the sixth child of nine siblings, and has four brothers and four sisters.[7] O'Neill's father was a founding member of local GAA club Pádraig Pearse's Kilrea. His brothers Gerry and Leo played for the club as well as being on the Derry senior team which won the 1958 Ulster Championship and reached that year's All-Ireland Championship final. He played for both Kilrea and Derry at underage level as well. He also played Gaelic football while boarding at St. Columb's College, Derry,[7] and later at St. Malachy's College, Belfast.[7]

While at St. Malachy's, he first came to public attention as a football player with local side Rosario and then eventually with Distillery. This breached the Gaelic Athletic Association prohibition on Gaelic footballers playing "foreign sports". When St. Malachy's reached the 1970 MacRory Cup final, the Antrim GAA County Board refused to allow the game to go ahead at Belfast's Casement Park.[7] The colleges involved switched the venue to County Tyrone to enable him to play. St. Malachy's won the game.[7]

Club career edit

Early career edit

Before playing for Distillery in the Irish League, O'Neill played for the South Belfast side Rosario. (Now he also has a conference room dedicated to him in Rosario Football Club's local Youth Club.) While at Distillery, he won the Irish Cup in 1971, scoring twice in a 3–0 win over Derry City in the final.[8] His second goal was particularly impressive, a mazy run in which he dribbled past three opponents before scoring with a powerful shot.[9] As a result of winning the cup, Distillery qualified for Europe the following season. O'Neill scored against Barcelona in the European Cup Winners' Cup in a 3–1 home defeat in September 1971.[10] During this period he was spotted by a scout for Nottingham Forest. He signed for Nottingham Forest in October 1971, leaving Distillery and quitting his university studies.[11]

Nottingham Forest edit

O'Neill went on to play an integral role in Forest's golden era. He scored on his league debut for the club, a 4–1 win over West Bromwich Albion on 13 November 1971.[12] He went on to make a total of 17 league appearances that season, scoring twice, but could not prevent his side's relegation from the First Division in 1972.[12] However, the appointment of Brian Clough as manager in January 1975 was the beginning of a revolution for Nottingham Forest.[13] Under Clough's management, O'Neill helped Forest gain promotion to the top flight in 1977, won the league title and League Cup a year later,[14] followed by further League Cup success a year later.[15] He was dropped to the substitutes bench for Forest's first European Cup victory over Malmö in 1979 after failing to fully recover from an injury,[16][17] but he played in their 1980 win over Hamburg.[18]

Later career edit

O'Neill signed for Norwich City in February 1981 for £250,000, however, Norwich were relegated on the last day of the season and he activated a release clause which enabled him to sign for Manchester City.[19] Despite a good start, he soon became out of favour with manager John Bond and returned to Norwich in February 1982, where he scored six goals to help them finish third and secure promotion.[19] After another season at Norwich, he returned to Nottingham to play for Notts County where they had successive relegations.[19] O'Neill attempted to make a comeback in 1984 with Chesterfield, but only played part of a reserve game before being forced off with a knee injury after 20 minutes. This was made in an attempt to get fit for Northern Ireland's 1986 World Cup squad. After leaving Chesterfield, then-Fulham manager Ray Harford invited O'Neill to join the club in a bid to regain his fitness. O'Neill only managed to take part in two reserve games for Fulham (neither of which he completed), before retiring as a result of his cruciate ligament injury in February 1985.[20][21]

International career edit

O'Neill first represented his country in an amateur international against Scotland at The Oval in February 1971. Then he made his senior debut in a UEFA Euro 1972 qualifying game against Soviet Union national football team on 13 October 1971.[22] He was then a regular for Northern Ireland, captaining the side at the 1982 World Cup in Spain which reached the second group stage and included defeating the host nation in Valencia. He played 64 times and scored eight goals for Northern Ireland between 1971 and 1984.[23] He also won the British Home Championship twice as a player, in 1980 and 1984.[23][24][25]

Managerial career edit

After his playing career, O'Neill worked at an insurance company[19] before beginning a career in football management, initially at Grantham Town in 1987. This was followed by a brief spell at the helm of Shepshed Charterhouse.[20]

Wycombe Wanderers edit

He became manager of Wycombe Wanderers in February 1990. He played in the Martin O'Neill XI side, along with George Best, in the last match to be played at Loakes Park. In the 1990–91 season, he took Wycombe to fifth in the Football Conference. In the 1991–92 season, he led Wycombe to 2nd place in the Conference, losing out to Colchester United only on goal difference. The following season, he took Wycombe into the Football League for the very first time. In the 1993–94 season, he took Wycombe to a second successive promotion via the Division 3 play-offs and a 4–2 win over Preston North End took them up into Division 2.[26] In the 1994–95 season, Wycombe narrowly missed out on the Division 2 play-offs and he left the club on 13 June 1995 to become manager at Norwich City. O'Neill also won the FA Trophy with Wycombe in 1991 and 1993.[27]

Under O'Neill, Wycombe also reached the Conference League Cup final twice (winners in 1991–92). The team also won three Conference Shield titles and the (Evening Standard) London Fives in 1994 and 1995.[28][29] Wycombe were also beaten finalists in both the Berks & Bucks Senior Cup and Drinkwise Cup.[28][30]

He is Wycombe's second most successful manager in their history, having been surpassed by Gareth Ainsworth, who led Wycombe to the second tier of English football for the 2020/2021 season.

Norwich City edit

O'Neill became manager of Norwich City in June 1995,[31] and left the club in December, due to differences with club chairman Robert Chase over the potential signing of striker Dean Windass, during his first stint at Hull City for £750,000.[32]

Leicester City edit

O'Neill joined Leicester City, immediately after leaving Norwich City. In his first season, Leicester were promoted from the Football League to the Premier League via the play-offs. They won the Football League Cup under him in 1997,[33][34] and 2000,[35] as well as reaching the 1999 final of the competition.[36] They finished ninth in the Premier League in 1997, tenth in 1998 and 1999, and eighth in 2000. The two League Cup triumphs saw them qualify for the UEFA Cup in 1997–98 and 2000–01.

In October 1998, he was favourite to take over the manager's job at Leeds United.[37] George Graham, who had just resigned from Leeds, brought his Spurs team to Filbert Street for his first game in charge. Leicester Mercury organised a protest and printed thousands of "Don't Go Martin" posters, which were held up by fans throughout the game, which Leicester won. Thousands of balloons were also released. O'Neill remained as Leicester manager until his contract expired.[citation needed]

Celtic edit

O'Neill left Leicester on 1 June 2000,[38] taking over from the team of John Barnes and Kenny Dalglish to become manager of Celtic, who had finished runners-up to Old Firm rivals Rangers in both of their previous seasons; in the season just gone, they had finished 21 points behind the champions.

O'Neill's first Old Firm game, in late August 2000, ended in a 6–2 victory for Celtic over Rangers.[39] It was their biggest victory over Rangers since the 1957 Scottish League Cup Final. His second Old Firm game saw a reversal of fortunes, however, as Celtic suffered a 5–1 defeat.[39] In that first season, O'Neill won a domestic treble with Celtic, the first time this had been achieved since 1968–69. He was then touted as a potential successor to Alex Ferguson, who had announced he was to leave Manchester United in 2002.[40] Celtic then retained the league title in 2001–02, the first time since 1982 that Celtic had managed that feat. Celtic also qualified for the Champions League group stage, winning all of their home games but losing all of their away games.

He then guided Celtic to the 2003 UEFA Cup Final in Seville, which Celtic lost 3–2 in extra time to a Porto side managed by José Mourinho.[41] This was Celtic's first European final since 1970 and they beat Blackburn, Celta Vigo, Stuttgart, Liverpool and Boavista on the way to the final. The following season Celtic regained the league title from rivals Rangers and reached the quarter finals of the UEFA Cup, including a victory against Barcelona.

On 25 May 2005, Celtic announced that O'Neill would resign as manager to care for his wife Geraldine, who had lymphoma. His last competitive game in charge of Celtic was the Scottish Cup final 1–0 victory over Dundee United on 28 May 2005, decided by an eleventh-minute goal by Alan Thompson.[42]

Under O'Neill, Celtic won 213, drew 29 and lost 40, of 282 games played, and he was the most successful Celtic manager since Jock Stein. In his five seasons at Celtic Park, O'Neill won three League titles, three Scottish Cups, and a League Cup. The two league titles he lost were by margins of a point and a goal. He also oversaw a record 7 consecutive victories in Old Firm derbies, and in season 2003–04 Celtic created a British record of 25 consecutive league victories.[43] His win rate of 75.5% is the highest of any manager in the club's history.[44]

Aston Villa edit

 
O'Neill in charge of Aston Villa

O'Neill was introduced as the Aston Villa manager at a press conference on 4 August 2006. At the press conference he stated "It's absolutely fantastic to be back and with a club such as this. This is a fantastic challenge. I am well aware of the history of this football club. Trying to restore it to its days of former glory seems a long way away – but why not try? It is nearly 25 years since they won the European Cup but that is the dream."[45]

Villa had the year's longest unbeaten start of any Premier League side in 2006–07 (9 games), not losing a league game until 28 October. Villa suffered a mid-season slump but recovered late in the season, winning their three away games in April, to end the season how it began with a run of 9 unbeaten fixtures. For this O'Neill was named the Premier League Manager of the Month for April.[46] Villa's final points tally was 50,[47] an improvement of 8 over the previous season and finished 11th, 5 places higher than the previous season.[48] In October 2007, Aston Villa owner Randy Lerner said that he would not stop O'Neill from leaving Villa if he was offered the vacant post of England manager.[49] O'Neill later dismissed the reports, calling them "unfair speculation".[50]

Aston Villa just missed out on a UEFA Cup spot on the final day of the 2007–08 season and qualified for the Intertoto Cup by finishing 6th. They scored 71 goals, (their best ever tally in the Premier League and best tally since winning the title in 1981), gained 60 points which was Villa's highest points tally since 1996–97, and were the third highest goalscorers.[51]

After 25 games of the 2008–09 season, having qualified for the UEFA Cup as joint winners of the Intertoto Cup, the club were third in the table on 51 points, 2 points above Chelsea on level games and 7 points above Arsenal in 5th place and on course for a place in the Champions League for the first time since 1983. O'Neill decided to prioritise Champions League qualification above all else, fielding a virtual reserve side for a UEFA Cup game against CSKA Moscow which was subsequently lost.[52] Following this, Villa failed to win any of the next 8 league games and improving form for Arsenal & Chelsea meant that Villa failed to reach the top 4.

At the start of the 2009–10 season Villa failed to qualify for the group stage of the newly named Europa League, but continued their progress in the league with wins against Manchester United, Chelsea and Liverpool.[53] Arsenal defeated Villa 3–0 at Emirates Stadium, and drew at home.[53]

Once again Villa finished 6th for the 3rd season running, and once again improved their points tally finishing with 64 points; their poor home form (they drew 8 times at home) denied them a chance to qualify for the UEFA Champions League.

Aston Villa reached their first final under Martin O'Neill, and first final in 10 years on 28 February 2010 against Manchester United in the League Cup, but lost 2–1.[54]

On 9 August 2010, O'Neill resigned as manager of Aston Villa with immediate effect.[55] On his departure O'Neill said "I have enjoyed my time at Aston Villa immensely. It's obviously a wrench to be leaving such a magnificent club."[56] O'Neill was reportedly unhappy about the funds available for transfers,[57] but his departure just five days before the start of the new season still came as a shock to the club and its players.[57] Lerner issued a statement two days later saying he and O'Neill "no longer shared a common view as to how to move forward, but the two remain good friends."[58]

Sunderland edit

On 3 December 2011, O'Neill signed a three-year contract with the Premier League club Sunderland, the team he had supported as a boy.[59] In O'Neill's first game in charge Sunderland came from 1–0 down to beat Blackburn Rovers 2–1 at the Stadium of Light. Under O'Neill, Sunderland began to improve dramatically with four wins from his first six games, including one over league leaders Manchester City. The Daily Telegraph commented that Sunderland could make a late challenge for a European place if they kept their performances up.[60] Sunderland continued to perform well in the first few months under O'Neill. They rose to ninth in the league and continued their challenge for a Europa League spot. On 18 February, they beat Arsenal 2–0 to knock them out of the FA Cup fifth round. A week after this they lost 4–0 to West Bromwich Albion.[61] The next week was O'Neill's first Tyne–Wear derby. The 'fiercely contested' match finished 1–1 with two red cards for Sunderland.[62] The following week Sunderland defeated Liverpool 1–0 at the Stadium Of Light. Sunderland's form petered out at the end of the season and after no wins in the last 8 games but they finished a respectable 13th place, a position Sunderland fans would've been happy with after the start to the season.

The following season, O'Neill had bought Steven Fletcher and Adam Johnson in an attempt to build on his previous 13th place and push on for the top 10. He claimed a solid 0–0 draw at the Emirates against Arsenal in the first game of the season. Sunderland went unbeaten for the first five games before a 3–0 defeat at Manchester City. They then claimed a 1–1 draw in O'Neill's first Tyne-Wear derby at the Stadium of Light thanks to a late Demba Ba own goal. Sunderland then suffered a surprising 0–1 home defeat to Aston Villa and a 1–0 defeat to Middlesbrough in the League Cup. After a 2–4 home defeat to West Brom, rumours circulated that O'Neill had resigned. These were all quashed quickly and O'Neill continued despite slipping into the relegation zone following a 1–3 home defeat to Chelsea. Sunderland's form started to improve over the winter as they climbed the table following an impressive run of results including another 1–0 success over Manchester City and a 2–3 success over Wigan as they reached a season high of 11th. However, this proved to be O'Neill's last victory as Sunderland endured a run of 8 games without a win.

Martin O'Neill was sacked by Sunderland on 30 March 2013 following a 1–0 defeat by Manchester United which left the team one point above the Premier League relegation zone with seven games left to play in the season. Sunderland had failed to secure victory in the eight matches leading up to O'Neill's departure, winning only three points out of a possible 24 during that spell.[63][64][65]

Republic of Ireland edit

O'Neill was confirmed as the new Republic of Ireland national football team manager on 5 November 2013. He was joined by former team captain Roy Keane as his assistant manager.[66] His first game in charge on 15 November 2013 against Latvia was a 3–0 win at the Aviva Stadium.[67] On 19 November 2013, O'Neill's first away game as manager saw the team draw 0–0 against Poland at the Stadion Miejski in Poznań.[68] His first loss as manager came on 5 March 2014, a 2–1 home friendly defeat to Serbia.[69]

On 16 November 2015, the Republic of Ireland qualified for UEFA Euro 2016 after defeating Bosnia and Herzegovina 3–1 on aggregate in the play-offs.[70]

O'Neill courted controversy in March 2016 following comments he made about the physical appearance of players' female partners, which were condemned as sexist. According to Orla O'Connor of the National Women's Council of Ireland: "There is no place for sexist comments of this nature in Irish football, particularly at this level" [71]

On 7 June 2016, O'Neill signed a contract extensions until the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia.[72] On 22 June 2016, Ireland defeated Italy 1–0 in their final group game of Euro 2016 to qualify for the knock-out stages and round of 16 match against France.[73][74]

In June 2016, O'Neill was criticised for using a derogatory term to describe LGBT people. During a public appearance in Cork that month, O'Neill informed a gathering of Ireland football fans that he had two others accompany assistant Roy Keane and him on a recent visit to San Francisco as he was worried people might think they were "queers". The Gay and Lesbian Equality Network (GLEN) condemned the comments and called on him to apologise to the LGBT community. The National LGBT Federation also called on O'Neill to withdraw the remarks and apologise, noting that O'Neill's behaviour could only have a detrimental effect on attempts to tackle homophobic prejudice in sport. He apologised for the derogatory remark a number of days later.[75][76]

On 9 October 2017, Ireland defeated Wales 1–0 in Cardiff to qualify for the qualification play-offs.[77] In the first leg of the play-offs on 11 November, Ireland drew 0–0 against Denmark in Copenhagen.[78] In the second leg on 14 November in Dublin, Ireland lost 5–1 to Denmark after taking the lead in the game.[79] In January 2018, O'Neill signed a new two-year contract with the FAI after previously verbally agreeing to the contract in October 2017.[80]

On 6 September 2018, an understrength Ireland lost 4–1 to Wales in their opening game in the UEFA Nations League.[81][82] Ireland went on to finish bottom of their group, picking up just two points in two 0–0 draws against Denmark and were relegated to UEFA Nations League C for the 2020–21 UEFA Nations League (although were later restored to League B following a format change).[83] On 21 November 2018, O'Neill parted company with the FAI.[6][84]

Nottingham Forest edit

It was announced on 15 January 2019 that O'Neill had become the manager of Nottingham Forest.[85] O'Neill guided the club to a ninth-place finish in the Championship. However, he was sacked as manager on 28 June 2019, soon after assistant Roy Keane had departed the club.[86]

Outside football edit

Despite never completing his degree, O'Neill remains a follower of criminology. His fascination began with the James Hanratty case of 1961.[87] He has worked in television as an analyst for BBC and ITV at the World Cup, the European Championship and on UEFA Champions League matches.

O'Neill was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 1983 New Year Honours for services to association football,[88] and promoted to Officer of the same Order (OBE) for services to football in the 2004 New Year Honours.[89][90] In 2002, Norwich supporters voted him into the club's Hall of Fame.

He was awarded the Nottingham Lifetime Achievement Award on 3 November 2013 for his services to football and achievements with Nottingham Forest.[91]

Personal life edit

O'Neill and his wife Geraldine have two daughters.[92]

In his youth, O'Neill supported Sunderland A.F.C. and Celtic F.C. His favourite player was Sunderland's captain and centre half Charlie Hurley, who eventually won Sunderland's Man of the Century award in 1979.[93]

Career statistics edit

International goals edit

[94]

Scores and results list Northern Ireland's goal tally first.

Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition
1 28 March 1973 Coventry   Portugal 1–0 1–1 1974 World Cup qualification
2 16 May 1973 Glasgow   Scotland 1–0 2–1 1973 British Home Championship
3 30 October 1974 Stockholm   Sweden 2–0 2–0 Euro 1976 qualifying
4 13 May 1978 Glasgow   Scotland 1–1 1–1 1978 British Home Championship
5 15 June 1980 Melbourne   Australia 1–1 1–1 Friendly match
6 30 March 1983 Belfast   Turkey 2–0 2–1 Euro 1984 qualifying
7 21 September 1983 Belfast   Austria 3–1 3–1 Euro 1984 qualifying
8 12 September 1984 Belfast   Romania 3–1 3–2 1986 World Cup qualification

Managerial statistics edit

As of match played 5 May 2019[95]
Managerial record by team and tenure
Team From To Record
P W D L Win %
Wycombe Wanderers 7 February 1990 13 June 1995 262 140 63 59 053.4
Norwich City 13 June 1995 17 December 1995 20 9 7 4 045.0
Leicester City 21 December 1995 1 June 2000 223 85 68 70 038.1
Celtic 1 June 2000 31 May 2005 282 213 29 40 075.5
Aston Villa 5 August 2006 9 August 2010 190 80 60 50 042.11
Sunderland 3 December 2011 30 March 2013 66 21 20 25 031.8
Republic of Ireland 5 November 2013 21 November 2018 55 19 20 16 034.5
Nottingham Forest 15 January 2019 28 June 2019 19 8 3 8 042.1
Total 967 487 239 241 050.4

Honours edit

Player edit

Distillery

Nottingham Forest

Northern Ireland

Manager edit

Wycombe Wanderers

Leicester City

Celtic

Aston Villa

Individual

References edit

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External links edit

  • Martin O'Neill management career statistics at Soccerbase
  • Martin O'Neill BBC Sport, 14 May 2002
  • Martin O'Neill Flown From The Nest
  • FIFA competition record (archived)  

martin, neill, other, people, named, disambiguation, martin, hugh, michael, neill, born, march, 1952, northern, irish, professional, football, manager, former, player, played, midfielder, after, brief, early, career, irish, league, neill, moved, england, where. For other people named Martin O Neill see Martin O Neill disambiguation Martin Hugh Michael O Neill OBE born 1 March 1952 is a Northern Irish professional football manager and former player who played as a midfielder After a brief early career in the Irish League O Neill moved to England where he spent most of his playing career with Nottingham Forest He won the First Division title in 1977 78 and the European Cup twice in 1979 and 1980 He was capped 64 times for the Northern Ireland national football team also captaining the side at the 1982 World Cup Martin O NeillOBEO Neill in 2023 Personal informationFull nameMartin Hugh Michael O Neill 1 Date of birth 1952 03 01 1 March 1952 age 71 2 Place of birthKilrea Northern IrelandHeight5 ft 10 in 1 78 m 3 Position s Midfielder 2 Youth careerRosario1969 1971Derry CitySenior career YearsTeamApps Gls 1971Distillery7 3 1971 1981Nottingham Forest285 48 1981Norwich City11 1 1981 1982Manchester City13 0 1982 1983Norwich City55 11 1983 1984Notts County64 5 1984Chesterfield0 0 1985Fulham 4 0 0 Total435 68 International career1971 1984Northern Ireland64 8 Managerial career1987 1989Grantham Town1989Shepshed Charterhouse1990 1995Wycombe Wanderers1995Norwich City1995 2000Leicester City2000 2005Celtic2006 2010Aston Villa2011 2013Sunderland2013 2018Republic of Ireland2019Nottingham Forest Club domestic league appearances and goalsO Neill has managed Grantham Town Wycombe Wanderers Norwich City Leicester City Celtic Aston Villa and Sunderland He guided Leicester City to the Football League Cup final three times winning twice As Celtic manager between 2000 and 2005 he led that club to seven trophies including three Scottish Premier League titles and the 2003 UEFA Cup Final After joining Aston Villa he achieved three consecutive sixth place finishes in the English Premier League and guided them to the 2010 Football League Cup Final He became Republic of Ireland manager in 2013 and led them to qualification for the 2016 UEFA European Championship for the third time in the nation s history beating the reigning world champions Germany in the process 5 He left the role with assistant Roy Keane by mutual agreement in November 2018 6 He was appointed as Nottingham Forest manager in January 2019 but left six months later Contents 1 Early life and Gaelic football career 2 Club career 2 1 Early career 2 2 Nottingham Forest 2 3 Later career 3 International career 4 Managerial career 4 1 Wycombe Wanderers 4 2 Norwich City 4 3 Leicester City 4 4 Celtic 4 5 Aston Villa 4 6 Sunderland 4 7 Republic of Ireland 4 8 Nottingham Forest 5 Outside football 6 Personal life 7 Career statistics 7 1 International goals 8 Managerial statistics 9 Honours 9 1 Player 9 2 Manager 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and Gaelic football career editO Neill was born in Kilrea 7 Derry Northern Ireland in 1952 He was the sixth child of nine siblings and has four brothers and four sisters 7 O Neill s father was a founding member of local GAA club Padraig Pearse s Kilrea His brothers Gerry and Leo played for the club as well as being on the Derry senior team which won the 1958 Ulster Championship and reached that year s All Ireland Championship final He played for both Kilrea and Derry at underage level as well He also played Gaelic football while boarding at St Columb s College Derry 7 and later at St Malachy s College Belfast 7 While at St Malachy s he first came to public attention as a football player with local side Rosario and then eventually with Distillery This breached the Gaelic Athletic Association prohibition on Gaelic footballers playing foreign sports When St Malachy s reached the 1970 MacRory Cup final the Antrim GAA County Board refused to allow the game to go ahead at Belfast s Casement Park 7 The colleges involved switched the venue to County Tyrone to enable him to play St Malachy s won the game 7 Club career editEarly career edit Before playing for Distillery in the Irish League O Neill played for the South Belfast side Rosario Now he also has a conference room dedicated to him in Rosario Football Club s local Youth Club While at Distillery he won the Irish Cup in 1971 scoring twice in a 3 0 win over Derry City in the final 8 His second goal was particularly impressive a mazy run in which he dribbled past three opponents before scoring with a powerful shot 9 As a result of winning the cup Distillery qualified for Europe the following season O Neill scored against Barcelona in the European Cup Winners Cup in a 3 1 home defeat in September 1971 10 During this period he was spotted by a scout for Nottingham Forest He signed for Nottingham Forest in October 1971 leaving Distillery and quitting his university studies 11 Nottingham Forest edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2018 O Neill went on to play an integral role in Forest s golden era He scored on his league debut for the club a 4 1 win over West Bromwich Albion on 13 November 1971 12 He went on to make a total of 17 league appearances that season scoring twice but could not prevent his side s relegation from the First Division in 1972 12 However the appointment of Brian Clough as manager in January 1975 was the beginning of a revolution for Nottingham Forest 13 Under Clough s management O Neill helped Forest gain promotion to the top flight in 1977 won the league title and League Cup a year later 14 followed by further League Cup success a year later 15 He was dropped to the substitutes bench for Forest s first European Cup victory over Malmo in 1979 after failing to fully recover from an injury 16 17 but he played in their 1980 win over Hamburg 18 Later career edit O Neill signed for Norwich City in February 1981 for 250 000 however Norwich were relegated on the last day of the season and he activated a release clause which enabled him to sign for Manchester City 19 Despite a good start he soon became out of favour with manager John Bond and returned to Norwich in February 1982 where he scored six goals to help them finish third and secure promotion 19 After another season at Norwich he returned to Nottingham to play for Notts County where they had successive relegations 19 O Neill attempted to make a comeback in 1984 with Chesterfield but only played part of a reserve game before being forced off with a knee injury after 20 minutes This was made in an attempt to get fit for Northern Ireland s 1986 World Cup squad After leaving Chesterfield then Fulham manager Ray Harford invited O Neill to join the club in a bid to regain his fitness O Neill only managed to take part in two reserve games for Fulham neither of which he completed before retiring as a result of his cruciate ligament injury in February 1985 20 21 International career editO Neill first represented his country in an amateur international against Scotland at The Oval in February 1971 Then he made his senior debut in a UEFA Euro 1972 qualifying game against Soviet Union national football team on 13 October 1971 22 He was then a regular for Northern Ireland captaining the side at the 1982 World Cup in Spain which reached the second group stage and included defeating the host nation in Valencia He played 64 times and scored eight goals for Northern Ireland between 1971 and 1984 23 He also won the British Home Championship twice as a player in 1980 and 1984 23 24 25 Managerial career editAfter his playing career O Neill worked at an insurance company 19 before beginning a career in football management initially at Grantham Town in 1987 This was followed by a brief spell at the helm of Shepshed Charterhouse 20 Wycombe Wanderers edit He became manager of Wycombe Wanderers in February 1990 He played in the Martin O Neill XI side along with George Best in the last match to be played at Loakes Park In the 1990 91 season he took Wycombe to fifth in the Football Conference In the 1991 92 season he led Wycombe to 2nd place in the Conference losing out to Colchester United only on goal difference The following season he took Wycombe into the Football League for the very first time In the 1993 94 season he took Wycombe to a second successive promotion via the Division 3 play offs and a 4 2 win over Preston North End took them up into Division 2 26 In the 1994 95 season Wycombe narrowly missed out on the Division 2 play offs and he left the club on 13 June 1995 to become manager at Norwich City O Neill also won the FA Trophy with Wycombe in 1991 and 1993 27 Under O Neill Wycombe also reached the Conference League Cup final twice winners in 1991 92 The team also won three Conference Shield titles and the Evening Standard London Fives in 1994 and 1995 28 29 Wycombe were also beaten finalists in both the Berks amp Bucks Senior Cup and Drinkwise Cup 28 30 He is Wycombe s second most successful manager in their history having been surpassed by Gareth Ainsworth who led Wycombe to the second tier of English football for the 2020 2021 season Norwich City edit O Neill became manager of Norwich City in June 1995 31 and left the club in December due to differences with club chairman Robert Chase over the potential signing of striker Dean Windass during his first stint at Hull City for 750 000 32 Leicester City edit O Neill joined Leicester City immediately after leaving Norwich City In his first season Leicester were promoted from the Football League to the Premier League via the play offs They won the Football League Cup under him in 1997 33 34 and 2000 35 as well as reaching the 1999 final of the competition 36 They finished ninth in the Premier League in 1997 tenth in 1998 and 1999 and eighth in 2000 The two League Cup triumphs saw them qualify for the UEFA Cup in 1997 98 and 2000 01 In October 1998 he was favourite to take over the manager s job at Leeds United 37 George Graham who had just resigned from Leeds brought his Spurs team to Filbert Street for his first game in charge Leicester Mercury organised a protest and printed thousands of Don t Go Martin posters which were held up by fans throughout the game which Leicester won Thousands of balloons were also released O Neill remained as Leicester manager until his contract expired citation needed Celtic edit O Neill left Leicester on 1 June 2000 38 taking over from the team of John Barnes and Kenny Dalglish to become manager of Celtic who had finished runners up to Old Firm rivals Rangers in both of their previous seasons in the season just gone they had finished 21 points behind the champions O Neill s first Old Firm game in late August 2000 ended in a 6 2 victory for Celtic over Rangers 39 It was their biggest victory over Rangers since the 1957 Scottish League Cup Final His second Old Firm game saw a reversal of fortunes however as Celtic suffered a 5 1 defeat 39 In that first season O Neill won a domestic treble with Celtic the first time this had been achieved since 1968 69 He was then touted as a potential successor to Alex Ferguson who had announced he was to leave Manchester United in 2002 40 Celtic then retained the league title in 2001 02 the first time since 1982 that Celtic had managed that feat Celtic also qualified for the Champions League group stage winning all of their home games but losing all of their away games He then guided Celtic to the 2003 UEFA Cup Final in Seville which Celtic lost 3 2 in extra time to a Porto side managed by Jose Mourinho 41 This was Celtic s first European final since 1970 and they beat Blackburn Celta Vigo Stuttgart Liverpool and Boavista on the way to the final The following season Celtic regained the league title from rivals Rangers and reached the quarter finals of the UEFA Cup including a victory against Barcelona On 25 May 2005 Celtic announced that O Neill would resign as manager to care for his wife Geraldine who had lymphoma His last competitive game in charge of Celtic was the Scottish Cup final 1 0 victory over Dundee United on 28 May 2005 decided by an eleventh minute goal by Alan Thompson 42 Under O Neill Celtic won 213 drew 29 and lost 40 of 282 games played and he was the most successful Celtic manager since Jock Stein In his five seasons at Celtic Park O Neill won three League titles three Scottish Cups and a League Cup The two league titles he lost were by margins of a point and a goal He also oversaw a record 7 consecutive victories in Old Firm derbies and in season 2003 04 Celtic created a British record of 25 consecutive league victories 43 His win rate of 75 5 is the highest of any manager in the club s history 44 Aston Villa edit nbsp O Neill in charge of Aston VillaO Neill was introduced as the Aston Villa manager at a press conference on 4 August 2006 At the press conference he stated It s absolutely fantastic to be back and with a club such as this This is a fantastic challenge I am well aware of the history of this football club Trying to restore it to its days of former glory seems a long way away but why not try It is nearly 25 years since they won the European Cup but that is the dream 45 Villa had the year s longest unbeaten start of any Premier League side in 2006 07 9 games not losing a league game until 28 October Villa suffered a mid season slump but recovered late in the season winning their three away games in April to end the season how it began with a run of 9 unbeaten fixtures For this O Neill was named the Premier League Manager of the Month for April 46 Villa s final points tally was 50 47 an improvement of 8 over the previous season and finished 11th 5 places higher than the previous season 48 In October 2007 Aston Villa owner Randy Lerner said that he would not stop O Neill from leaving Villa if he was offered the vacant post of England manager 49 O Neill later dismissed the reports calling them unfair speculation 50 Aston Villa just missed out on a UEFA Cup spot on the final day of the 2007 08 season and qualified for the Intertoto Cup by finishing 6th They scored 71 goals their best ever tally in the Premier League and best tally since winning the title in 1981 gained 60 points which was Villa s highest points tally since 1996 97 and were the third highest goalscorers 51 After 25 games of the 2008 09 season having qualified for the UEFA Cup as joint winners of the Intertoto Cup the club were third in the table on 51 points 2 points above Chelsea on level games and 7 points above Arsenal in 5th place and on course for a place in the Champions League for the first time since 1983 O Neill decided to prioritise Champions League qualification above all else fielding a virtual reserve side for a UEFA Cup game against CSKA Moscow which was subsequently lost 52 Following this Villa failed to win any of the next 8 league games and improving form for Arsenal amp Chelsea meant that Villa failed to reach the top 4 At the start of the 2009 10 season Villa failed to qualify for the group stage of the newly named Europa League but continued their progress in the league with wins against Manchester United Chelsea and Liverpool 53 Arsenal defeated Villa 3 0 at Emirates Stadium and drew at home 53 Once again Villa finished 6th for the 3rd season running and once again improved their points tally finishing with 64 points their poor home form they drew 8 times at home denied them a chance to qualify for the UEFA Champions League Aston Villa reached their first final under Martin O Neill and first final in 10 years on 28 February 2010 against Manchester United in the League Cup but lost 2 1 54 On 9 August 2010 O Neill resigned as manager of Aston Villa with immediate effect 55 On his departure O Neill said I have enjoyed my time at Aston Villa immensely It s obviously a wrench to be leaving such a magnificent club 56 O Neill was reportedly unhappy about the funds available for transfers 57 but his departure just five days before the start of the new season still came as a shock to the club and its players 57 Lerner issued a statement two days later saying he and O Neill no longer shared a common view as to how to move forward but the two remain good friends 58 Sunderland edit On 3 December 2011 O Neill signed a three year contract with the Premier League club Sunderland the team he had supported as a boy 59 In O Neill s first game in charge Sunderland came from 1 0 down to beat Blackburn Rovers 2 1 at the Stadium of Light Under O Neill Sunderland began to improve dramatically with four wins from his first six games including one over league leaders Manchester City The Daily Telegraph commented that Sunderland could make a late challenge for a European place if they kept their performances up 60 Sunderland continued to perform well in the first few months under O Neill They rose to ninth in the league and continued their challenge for a Europa League spot On 18 February they beat Arsenal 2 0 to knock them out of the FA Cup fifth round A week after this they lost 4 0 to West Bromwich Albion 61 The next week was O Neill s first Tyne Wear derby The fiercely contested match finished 1 1 with two red cards for Sunderland 62 The following week Sunderland defeated Liverpool 1 0 at the Stadium Of Light Sunderland s form petered out at the end of the season and after no wins in the last 8 games but they finished a respectable 13th place a position Sunderland fans would ve been happy with after the start to the season The following season O Neill had bought Steven Fletcher and Adam Johnson in an attempt to build on his previous 13th place and push on for the top 10 He claimed a solid 0 0 draw at the Emirates against Arsenal in the first game of the season Sunderland went unbeaten for the first five games before a 3 0 defeat at Manchester City They then claimed a 1 1 draw in O Neill s first Tyne Wear derby at the Stadium of Light thanks to a late Demba Ba own goal Sunderland then suffered a surprising 0 1 home defeat to Aston Villa and a 1 0 defeat to Middlesbrough in the League Cup After a 2 4 home defeat to West Brom rumours circulated that O Neill had resigned These were all quashed quickly and O Neill continued despite slipping into the relegation zone following a 1 3 home defeat to Chelsea Sunderland s form started to improve over the winter as they climbed the table following an impressive run of results including another 1 0 success over Manchester City and a 2 3 success over Wigan as they reached a season high of 11th However this proved to be O Neill s last victory as Sunderland endured a run of 8 games without a win Martin O Neill was sacked by Sunderland on 30 March 2013 following a 1 0 defeat by Manchester United which left the team one point above the Premier League relegation zone with seven games left to play in the season Sunderland had failed to secure victory in the eight matches leading up to O Neill s departure winning only three points out of a possible 24 during that spell 63 64 65 Republic of Ireland edit O Neill was confirmed as the new Republic of Ireland national football team manager on 5 November 2013 He was joined by former team captain Roy Keane as his assistant manager 66 His first game in charge on 15 November 2013 against Latvia was a 3 0 win at the Aviva Stadium 67 On 19 November 2013 O Neill s first away game as manager saw the team draw 0 0 against Poland at the Stadion Miejski in Poznan 68 His first loss as manager came on 5 March 2014 a 2 1 home friendly defeat to Serbia 69 On 16 November 2015 the Republic of Ireland qualified for UEFA Euro 2016 after defeating Bosnia and Herzegovina 3 1 on aggregate in the play offs 70 O Neill courted controversy in March 2016 following comments he made about the physical appearance of players female partners which were condemned as sexist According to Orla O Connor of the National Women s Council of Ireland There is no place for sexist comments of this nature in Irish football particularly at this level 71 On 7 June 2016 O Neill signed a contract extensions until the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia 72 On 22 June 2016 Ireland defeated Italy 1 0 in their final group game of Euro 2016 to qualify for the knock out stages and round of 16 match against France 73 74 In June 2016 O Neill was criticised for using a derogatory term to describe LGBT people During a public appearance in Cork that month O Neill informed a gathering of Ireland football fans that he had two others accompany assistant Roy Keane and him on a recent visit to San Francisco as he was worried people might think they were queers The Gay and Lesbian Equality Network GLEN condemned the comments and called on him to apologise to the LGBT community The National LGBT Federation also called on O Neill to withdraw the remarks and apologise noting that O Neill s behaviour could only have a detrimental effect on attempts to tackle homophobic prejudice in sport He apologised for the derogatory remark a number of days later 75 76 On 9 October 2017 Ireland defeated Wales 1 0 in Cardiff to qualify for the qualification play offs 77 In the first leg of the play offs on 11 November Ireland drew 0 0 against Denmark in Copenhagen 78 In the second leg on 14 November in Dublin Ireland lost 5 1 to Denmark after taking the lead in the game 79 In January 2018 O Neill signed a new two year contract with the FAI after previously verbally agreeing to the contract in October 2017 80 On 6 September 2018 an understrength Ireland lost 4 1 to Wales in their opening game in the UEFA Nations League 81 82 Ireland went on to finish bottom of their group picking up just two points in two 0 0 draws against Denmark and were relegated to UEFA Nations League C for the 2020 21 UEFA Nations League although were later restored to League B following a format change 83 On 21 November 2018 O Neill parted company with the FAI 6 84 Nottingham Forest edit It was announced on 15 January 2019 that O Neill had become the manager of Nottingham Forest 85 O Neill guided the club to a ninth place finish in the Championship However he was sacked as manager on 28 June 2019 soon after assistant Roy Keane had departed the club 86 Outside football editDespite never completing his degree O Neill remains a follower of criminology His fascination began with the James Hanratty case of 1961 87 He has worked in television as an analyst for BBC and ITV at the World Cup the European Championship and on UEFA Champions League matches O Neill was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire MBE in the 1983 New Year Honours for services to association football 88 and promoted to Officer of the same Order OBE for services to football in the 2004 New Year Honours 89 90 In 2002 Norwich supporters voted him into the club s Hall of Fame He was awarded the Nottingham Lifetime Achievement Award on 3 November 2013 for his services to football and achievements with Nottingham Forest 91 Personal life editO Neill and his wife Geraldine have two daughters 92 In his youth O Neill supported Sunderland A F C and Celtic F C His favourite player was Sunderland s captain and centre half Charlie Hurley who eventually won Sunderland s Man of the Century award in 1979 93 Career statistics editInternational goals edit 94 Scores and results list Northern Ireland s goal tally first Goal Date Venue Opponent Score Result Competition1 28 March 1973 Coventry nbsp Portugal 1 0 1 1 1974 World Cup qualification2 16 May 1973 Glasgow nbsp Scotland 1 0 2 1 1973 British Home Championship3 30 October 1974 Stockholm nbsp Sweden 2 0 2 0 Euro 1976 qualifying4 13 May 1978 Glasgow nbsp Scotland 1 1 1 1 1978 British Home Championship5 15 June 1980 Melbourne nbsp Australia 1 1 1 1 Friendly match6 30 March 1983 Belfast nbsp Turkey 2 0 2 1 Euro 1984 qualifying7 21 September 1983 Belfast nbsp Austria 3 1 3 1 Euro 1984 qualifying8 12 September 1984 Belfast nbsp Romania 3 1 3 2 1986 World Cup qualificationManagerial statistics editAs of match played 5 May 2019 95 Managerial record by team and tenure Team From To RecordP W D L Win Wycombe Wanderers 7 February 1990 13 June 1995 262 140 63 59 0 53 4Norwich City 13 June 1995 17 December 1995 20 9 7 4 0 45 0Leicester City 21 December 1995 1 June 2000 223 85 68 70 0 38 1Celtic 1 June 2000 31 May 2005 282 213 29 40 0 75 5Aston Villa 5 August 2006 9 August 2010 190 80 60 50 0 42 11Sunderland 3 December 2011 30 March 2013 66 21 20 25 0 31 8Republic of Ireland 5 November 2013 21 November 2018 55 19 20 16 0 34 5Nottingham Forest 15 January 2019 28 June 2019 19 8 3 8 0 42 1Total 967 487 239 241 0 50 4Honours editPlayer edit Distillery Irish Cup 1970 71Nottingham Forest First Division 1977 78 15 League Cup 1977 78 1978 79 15 European Cup 1978 79 17 1979 80 18 FA Charity Shield 1978 23 European Super Cup 1979 96 Anglo Scottish Cup 1976 77 23 Northern Ireland British Home Championship 1979 80 23 24 1983 84 23 25 Manager edit Wycombe Wanderers Football League Third Division play offs 1994 23 Football Conference 1992 93 97 FA Trophy 1990 91 1992 93 23 Conference League Cup 1991 92 97 Football Conference Shield 1991 92 1992 93 1993 94 97 Leicester City Football League First Division play offs 1996 23 Football League Cup 1996 97 1999 2000 23 Celtic Scottish Premier League 2000 01 2001 02 2003 04 23 Scottish Cup 2000 01 2003 04 2004 05 23 Scottish League Cup 2000 01 23 UEFA Cup runner up 2002 03 23 Aston Villa Football League Cup runner up 2009 10 98 Individual Premier League Manager of the Month September 1997 October 1998 November 1999 April 2007 November 2007 December 2008 April 2010 December 2011 99 Scottish Premier League Manager of the Month August 2000 December 2000 February 2001 August 2001 April 2002 November 2002 October 2003 November 2003 January 2005 23 LMA Football League First Division Manager of Year 1993 94 LMA Football League Third Division Manager of Year 1995 96 SFWA Manager of the Year 2000 01 2001 02 2003 04 23 Scottish Premier League Manager of the Year 2003 04References edit Order of the British Empire K Z BBC News 31 December 2003 Retrieved 9 August 2010 a b Martin O Neill Barry Hugman s Footballers Retrieved 9 June 2019 Martin O Neill worldfootball net Retrieved 7 September 2014 Martin O Neill Flown From The Nest Retrieved 7 September 2014 Spellman Damian 16 November 2015 Republic of Ireland qualify for Euro 2016 Evening Standard Retrieved 8 April 2017 a b Martin O Neill and Roy Keane leave Ireland jobs by mutual agreement RTE Sport 21 November 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2018 a b c d e f Said by O Neill during lecture on theme of What it means to be Irish Archived 26 August 2014 at the Wayback Machine part of the Ireland Of Tomorrow A Presidential Lecture Series Archived 18 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine first broadcast on RTE Radio on 31 December 2008 Northern Ireland Cup Finals RSSSF com Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Retrieved 6 September 2014 Montgomery Alex 2007 Martin O Neill The Biography Virgin Books p 108 ISBN 978 0 7535 1241 8 Retrieved 6 September 2014 via Google Books Pavlushko Anton Lisburn Distillery 1971 1972 Results Statto com Statto Organisation Archived from 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season May 1994 Shock Five a side success for Wanderers Chair Boys Retrieved 19 July 2020 Wanderers take 5 a title Monday 15th May 1995 London Fives at Wembley Chair Boys Retrieved 19 July 2020 Wycombe Wanderers 1992 1993 retro April 1993 League season completed but disappointment in Drinkwise Cup Chair Boys Retrieved 19 July 2020 O Neill returns to Norwich The Independent 14 June 1995 Retrieved 23 April 2012 Haylett Trevor 18 December 1995 O Neill s sudden resignation stuns Norwich The Independent Retrieved 17 August 2009 Moore Glenn 7 April 1997 Football Heskey levels at the last to deflate Juninho The Independent Retrieved 23 April 2012 Moore Glenn 17 April 1997 Claridge s five star silver service The Independent Retrieved 23 April 2012 Leicester triumph at Wembley BBC Sport 27 February 2000 Retrieved 23 April 2012 Sport Football Nielsen nicks it for Spurs BBC Sport 22 March 1999 Retrieved 23 April 2012 O Neill to stay with Leicester BBC Sport 25 October 1998 Retrieved 23 April 2012 Celtic win O Neill tussle BBC Sport 1 June 2000 Retrieved 23 April 2012 a b Topical Top Tens Sky Sports BSkyB Archived from the original on 16 January 2014 Retrieved 22 June 2013 Ferguson touts O Neill as successor BBC Sport 20 May 2001 Retrieved 13 June 2015 Porto end Celtic s Uefa dream BBC Sport 21 May 2003 Retrieved 23 April 2012 O Neill leaves Bhoys with Cup win BBC Sport 28 May 2005 Retrieved 23 April 2012 Smyth Rob Ashdown John 11 March 2009 Have Manchester United just set a record for consecutive league wins The Guardian Guardian News and Media Retrieved 14 January 2011 Celtic Manager Records fitba stats Retrieved 31 January 2021 Carling Cup final preview Sky Sports 28 February 2010 Retrieved 15 January 2011 Premier League Manager of the Month Awards from August 1993 to April 2014 www myfootballfacts com Retrieved 15 January 2011 Aston Villa 2006 2007 English Premier League Table Statto Archived from the original on 29 March 2014 Retrieved 28 March 2014 Aston Villa 2005 2006 English Premier League Table Statto Archived from the original on 29 March 2014 Retrieved 28 March 2014 Villa free O Neill for England Eurosport Archived from the original on 21 October 2007 Retrieved 4 November 2007 O Neill dismisses unfair speculation Eurosport Archived from the original on 21 October 2007 Retrieved 4 November 2007 2007 2008 English Premier League Table soccernet espn go com com Archived from the original on 24 October 2012 Retrieved 15 January 2011 Villa reserves crash out to CSKA Moscow CNN 26 February 2009 Retrieved 14 December 2013 a b Arsenal 3 0 Aston Villa BBC Sport 27 December 2009 Retrieved 15 January 2011 Winter Henry 1 March 2010 Aston Villa 1 Manchester United 2 Carling Cup final match report London www telegraph co uk Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 15 January 2011 Club Statement Aston Villa 9 August 2010 Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 28 March 2014 Martin O Neill resigns as Aston Villa manager BBC Sport 9 August 2010 Retrieved 9 August 2010 a b James Stuart 9 August 2010 Martin O Neill quits as Aston Villa manager after transfer funds row The Guardian London Retrieved 13 December 2010 James Stuart 11 August 2010 Aston Villa s Randy Lerner breaks silence over Martin O Neill exit The Guardian London Retrieved 13 December 2010 Sunderland appoint Martin O Neill Sunderland A F C 3 December 2011 Archived from the original on 13 July 2012 Retrieved 3 December 2011 Edwards Luke 3 January 2012 Sunderland s remarkable turnaround under Martin O Neill continues apace with Wigan rout London The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 3 March 2012 West Brom 4 0 Sunderland BBC Sport 25 February 2012 Retrieved 3 March 2012 Edwards Luke 4 March 2012 Sunderland manager Martin O Neill accuses Newcastle counterpart Alan Pardew of influencing the referee The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Relegation threatened Sunderland sack manager Martin O Neill BBC Sport 30 March 2013 Retrieved 30 March 2013 The club has parted company with manager Martin O Neill Sunderland Association Football Club 30 March 2013 Retrieved 30 March 2013 Season Review 2011 12 Part Two Sunderland World 2 July 2012 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 2 July 2012 Martin O Neill amp Roy Keane Republic of Ireland appoint duo BBC Sport BBC 5 November 2013 Retrieved 5 November 2013 Rep of Ireland 3 Latvia 0 BBC Sport 15 November 2013 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Poland 0 Rep of Ireland 0 BBC Sport 19 November 2013 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Ireland loosen up in second half and Serbia take full advantage Republic of Ireland The Guardian TheGuardian com 5 March 2014 Jon Walters double against Bosnia sends Republic of Ireland through Guardian 16 November 2015 Retrieved 18 November 2015 Martin O Neill in sexism storm after quip only pretty WAGs welcome at Euros Belfast Telegraph Retrieved 13 June 2016 Martin O Neill and Roy Keane sign contract extensions with Ireland Irish Independent 7 June 2016 Retrieved 9 June 2016 No time to dwell on famous win for Ireland s tired heroes Irish Independent 24 June 2016 Retrieved 24 June 2016 Robbie Brady s header earns Ireland win over Italy and last 16 spot The Guardian 22 June 2016 Retrieved 24 June 2016 O Neill accused of event queer jibe www thetimes co uk Retrieved 13 June 2016 Martin O Neill apologises for queers remark The Irish Times Retrieved 13 June 2016 James McClean stuns Wales and sends Republic of Ireland into play offs Guardian 9 October 2017 Retrieved 10 October 2017 Ireland s World Cup play off on a knife edge after draw away to Denmark The 42 10 November 2017 Retrieved 14 November 2017 Republic of Ireland s World Cup dream shattered by Eriksen and Denmark Guardian 14 November 2017 Retrieved 15 November 2017 Republic of Ireland manager Martin O Neill signs new deal with the FAI Irish Independent 23 January 2018 Retrieved 25 January 2018 Gareth Bale s brilliance and Ampadu s impudence help Wales rout Ireland The Guardian 6 September 2018 Retrieved 7 September 2018 Comment This looked like the end of an era for Ireland not the start of one Irish Independent 6 September 2018 Retrieved 7 September 2018 Toothless Ireland stretch goal drought to four matches after disappointing Denmark draw Irish Independent 19 November 2018 Retrieved 20 November 2018 Martin O Neill s statement in full Irish Independent 22 November 2018 Retrieved 22 November 2018 Martin O Neill takes charge at Nottingham Forest Sky Sports 15 January 2019 Retrieved 15 January 2019 Sabri Lamouchi Nottingham Forest appoint Frenchman 18 minutes after sacking Martin O Neill Kehoe Ian 30 May 2004 Bhoy wonder The Sunday Business Post Archived from the original on 22 February 2010 Retrieved 29 January 2009 UK amp Commonwealth list No 49212 The London Gazette Supplement 30 December 1982 p 15 O Neill becomes OBE BBC Sport 31 December 2003 Retrieved 29 January 2009 United Kingdom No 57155 The London Gazette 1st supplement 31 December 2003 p 12 O Neill reflects on Forest good time Nottingham Post 5 November 2013 Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 5 November 2013 Football s great O Neills are honoured by UU BelfastTelegraph co uk Belfasttelegraph Martin O Neill ready to fulfil his destiny at boyhood club Sunderland Guardian 10 December 2011 Retrieved 5 November 2013 Martin O Neill International Playing Record 11v11 Retrieved 20 November 2013 Martin O Neils managerial career Racing Post Archived from the original on 16 August 2007 Retrieved 26 February 2010 European Super Cup 1979 80 footballsite co uk Retrieved 6 September 2014 a b c History Football Conference Archived from the original on 16 September 2010 Retrieved 11 November 2017 McNulty Phil 28 February 2010 Aston Villa 1 2 Man Utd BBC Sport BBC Retrieved 28 April 2020 Manager profile Martin O Neill Premier League Retrieved 15 September 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Martin O Neill Martin O Neill management career statistics at Soccerbase Martin O Neill BBC Sport 14 May 2002 Martin O Neill Flown From The Nest Martin O Neill FIFA competition record archived nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Martin O 27Neill amp oldid 1186786814, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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