Football
ESPN staff 10y

Roy Keane: Player's heart attack took heat off me as Sunderland boss

Roy Keane has admitted to feeling "glad" of the timing when one of his players suffered a heart attack during his tenure as Sunderland manager because it deflected attention away from a bad result on the pitch.

Keane, 43, revealed the moment in his new autobiography, "The Second Half," which comes out later this week and also features fresh criticism of several figures from his time at Manchester United including Sir Alex Ferguson, Carlos Queiroz, Peter Schmeichel, Paul Scholes and other members of the group of players dubbed the "Class of '92."

In the new book Keane tells of how in August 2007, having brought Sunderland up to the Premier League as winners of the Championship the previous season, his team were beaten 3-0 at Luton Town in a League Cup tie on the back of three straight defeats in the top flight.

On the same evening in a match elsewhere one of his Sunderland players, Clive Clark, suffered a heart attack while on loan for Leicester against Nottingham Forest, and Keane admits thinking that the timing of the incident helped ease the pressure on him. 

"The news came through to us after the game," Keane wrote. "The madness of football: we'd been beaten 3-0 by Luton, a shocking result, but at the press conference after the game I said that football results really didn't matter and I mentioned that Clive Clarke had had a heart attack.

"And I had the evil thought 'I'm glad he had it tonight.' Because it would deflect from our woeful performance.

"That was the world I was in."

Sunderland finished 15th in their first season in the Premier League under Keane, who was sacked in December 2008 and replaced by Ricky Sbragia.

The former Old Trafford captain spent almost two years in charge of Ipswich Town, before embarking on a successful career as a television pundit. He is now Paul Lambert's assistant at Aston Villa, and performs the same role for Martin O'Neill with the Republic of Ireland national team.

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