November 23, 2024

Gary O’Neil: Wolves name former Bournemouth boss as Julen Lopetegui successor

Bournemouth #Bournemouth

Gary O'Neil smilesGary O’Neil won 11 of his 37 games in charge of Bournemouth

Former Bournemouth boss Gary O’Neil has been announced as the new manager of Wolves, replacing Julen Lopetegui on a three-year deal.

Lopetegui’s exit from Molineux was confirmed on Tuesday – just three days before the 2023-24 Premier League season begins.

O’Neil led Bournemouth to 15th last season but was sacked on 19 June.

“Gary’s a highly motivated young coach with strong principles,” said Wolves’ sporting director Matt Hobbs.

“It’s an opportunity to do something different with an up-and-coming British coach and from the people we met, Gary was clearly the right person.”

The 40-year-old is Wolves’ fourth manager in just over two years.

His first assignment will come on Monday when Wolves travel to Old Trafford to face Manchester United.

Several candidates were considered as Lopetegui’s replacement but O’Neil was the preferred option after his presentation during the interview with the Wolves hierarchy left a strong impression.

Hobbs added: “His attention to detail, thoroughness and history of developing players impressed us – he’s worked with both young and experienced players.

“The detail he showed with his tactical work, including against us last year, gives you confidence about the work he and his staff put into every game.

“He’s very forward thinking, very driven, like he has a point to prove because he did a great job at Bournemouth.”

As a player, O’Neil made more than 450 appearances for clubs including Portsmouth, Middlesbrough, West Ham, QPR and Norwich.

He took up his first coaching role in August 2020, when he became assistant manager with Liverpool’s Under-23s. He joined the coaching set-up at Bournemouth under former manager Jonathan Woodgate in February 2021.

The Cherries named O’Neil as interim boss following the sacking of Scott Parker after a 9-0 defeat against Liverpool in August 2022.

He was made the permanent manager in November, signing a one-and-a-half-year contract with the option to extend by a further 12 months, after picking up 13 points from 11 Premier League games to guide the south coast club from 17th to 14th.

During his time at Vitality Stadium, O’Neil managed the team for a total of 37 matches in all competitions, winning 11, drawing six and losing 20 – departing with a win ratio of 29.73%.

Lopetegui took charge of 27 games at Wolves during the same period, winning 10, drawing six and losing 11.

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Lack of financial backing an issue for LopeteguiJulen LopeteguiJulen Lopetegui was in charge for 27 competitive games at Wolves, winning 10, drawing six and losing 11

Former Real Madrid manager Lopetegui lasted just nine months in the dugout at Molineux.

Wolves were bottom of the standings when he replaced Bruno Lage in November but he successfully turned things around as they finished 13th to secure a sixth-successive campaign in the top flight.

Spanish journalist Guillem Balague said Lopetegui was told when he arrived that if he managed to save Wolves from relegation, he would be given funds to strengthen the squad over the summer.

However, Lopetegui felt the club did not follow through with that promise and chairman Jeff Shi released an open letter to fans earlier this week saying the club’s Chinese owners, Fosun, were committed to the club but had to be cautious in their summer spending to meet the Premier League financial fair play rules.

According to FFP rules, the club must make a profit on player trading this summer to avoid exceeding the accumulated £105m loss over a three-year period, the maximum permitted.

They sold captain Ruben Neves to Saudi Arabian side Al-Hilal for a club record £47m in June and also allowed Mexican striker Raul Jimenez join Fulham for £5m last month, with the only notable incoming signing being Republic of Ireland full-back Matt Doherty’s return as a free agent in July.

Lopetegui was thanked by Hobbs for the amicable nature of his departure from Molineux and his willingness to get the players ready for the new season even though the Spaniard knew his future lay elsewhere.

Hobbs said: “He was happy for us to take our time and interview other candidates and he was willing to wait until we found the right person, continuing to work and prepare the team properly.

“The way he and his staff worked during that period tells you everything you need to know about them. It’s allowed us time to go through a thorough process

“It’s okay to feel sad and disappointed about Julen’s departure, but at the same time it’s okay to be optimistic because I genuinely feel this is an exciting and progressive appointment for the club.”

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We asked on our Wolves page for people’s thoughts on O’Neil’s appointment. Here is a selection of the replies:

Adam: It just seems like a huge backwards step, or perhaps a reality check that we were spoiled with great finishing positions and a European adventure. With Lopetegui, it looked like we had a manager to steer us to more of that. With O’Neil, it looks like we’re settling for a fight for survival again.

Gaz: The appointment of O’Neil stinks of desperation. He has no track record and I don’t think he will be respected because of the way the board handled the Lopetegui situation. I think the powers-that-be at Wolves are going to get a very rough ride when the season starts.

Phil: Not the most exciting appointment but if he can do what he did at Bournemouth last season we’ll stay up and I’ll take that right now. Whatever our opinion on O’Neil, all supporters need to get behind him and back the team.

Chris: What an absolute disregard for loyal supporters. Best wishes to Gary – but he will be gone by Christmas.

Ian: I believe that we are doomed before we kick a ball. The owners know nothing about the club. We are already bottom on alphabetical order – that is where we will stay.

Dave: At least O’Neil has Premier League experience and has the stomach for a fight if needed. He needs the players to show the same attitude and the board not to panic.

Keith: O’Neil is a phenomenal young coach and I really hope he gets a chance at a team not in crisis. If he keeps Wolves up it’ll be an incredible achievement given how the team has been gutted.

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