The tactician claimed that the winger will not be using Twitter to front his feelings ever again after deleting his online account.
http://www.senore.com/Football-soccer/Kazakhstan-c2931 on Friday.
McClean, rated as one of the finest prospects Irish prospect in the English Premier League, was supposed to be starting the game, but the Italian coach eventually named him on the bench and was thus scrutinized after the team seemingly struggled.
Nonetheless, it is the player’s fault for speaking out on the Social Networking site, although this is not the first time such a outburst has been recorded. The 23-year-old has been punished in the past for such behavior and did not only earn scathing criticism
from the press, but Sunderland coach Martin O’Neill is also far from impressed.
The former Aston Villa man was thrilled that the player had finally gotten rid of his Twitter account and was hoping that the lad, who is not really a bad person, will move on from this ordeal quickly.
“I got one call from James on Tuesday night. Thankfully he hadn’t tweeted anybody. The best thing you can say is that he is learning. Or is he? It was kind of daft really. Because he’s played a couple of games, perhaps he thinks he should be playing in the
side. But it’s a manager’s (ie Giovanni Trapattoni’s) prerogative to pick who he wants and he had left out another couple of players at the time," the tactician was quoted as saying.
“I think you just have to go along with it. Somewhere along the way, he has to get into his head that the whole tweeting thing is public now,” he said.
Sunderland meanwhile face an injury crisis ahead of the game against http://www.senore.com/Football-soccer/Adam-Johnson-c3537 struggling to be fit for the tie.
Being one of the more important players at the helm, he is likely to start if he shrugs off his injury concerns, otherwise the pressure to perform will be on McClean, Steven Fletcher and http://www.senore.com/Football-soccer/Louis-Saha-c22459.
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