Martin o’neill

18 min read

“Angels is still my favourite Robbie Williams song – I was trying to tell him he’d done well, but it came across as, ‘You’ve got no talent’...”

Interview Chris Flanagan

YOU ASK THE QUESTIONS

TEAMS (PLAYER) 1971 Distillery 1971-81 Nottingham Forest 1981 Norwich 1981-82 Manchester City 1982-83 Norwich 1983-84 Notts County 1984 Chesterfield 1985 Fulham
COUNTRY (PLAYER) 1971-84 Northern Ireland
TEAMS (MANAGER) 1987-89 Grantham 1989 Shepshed Charterhouse 1990-95 Wycombe 1995 Norwich 1995-2000 Leicester 2000-05 Celtic 2006-10 Aston Villa 2011-13 Sunderland 2013-18 Republic of Ireland 2019 Nottingham Forest

FourFourTwo is walking through London with Martin O’Neill, trying to remember the name of John Cleese’s third wife.

“It wasn’t Connie Booth, the one he co-wrote Fawlty Towers with – I think he’s on good terms with her,” O’Neill muses. This wasn’t the conversation we expected with a double European Cup winner, but he seems happy to talk about pretty much anything.

The former Nottingham Forest player and Celtic manager had suggested meeting FFT outside Sloane Square tube station before wandering to a café – a pleasing throwback in itself, as few interviews in this modern era start so informally. Now 70, he has been living in central London since just before the pandemic. “We got here, then everyone started moving out,” the Northern Irishman rues. Since normal life returned, he’s been taking advantage of the nearby theatres and recently saw Cleese’s one-man show, based around a memoir that isn’t entirely complimentary of that third wife (Alyce Eichelberger, it turns out).

O’Neill has also been busy writing his autobiography, On Days Like These, deciding to pen it himself rather than use a ghostwriter in the way of most former footballers. We reach the café and sit in the autumn sunshine, and he’s ready to talk through his career – a career that may not be finished yet...

At St Malachy’s College in Belfast, you were involved in both GAA and football. Why did you pick football?

Natasha, via Instagram While I enjoyed GAA, it was amateur and I wanted to become a professional footballer in England. I was smitten with Ferenc Puskas, then George Best came onto the scene. Unfortunately GAA had a rule that anyone playing soccer couldn’t play Gaelic football – ridiculous for schoolboys. St Malachy’s had a big game that should’ve been at Casement Park, the big GAA stadium in Belfast, but I wasn’t allowed to play there, so they had to move it 60 miles.

Do you value your time at Distillery?

Ronald Carruthers, via Facebook Immensely. The manager, Jimmy McAlinden, had won the FA Cup with Portsmou


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