Portsmouth News

I’m certain I’ll manage Pompey one day, that’s my aim – O’Neil

- Neil Allen neil.allen@thenews.co.uk

FORMER Blues favourite Gary O’Neil has reflected on his pain at departing Fratton Park after 11 years.

And Bournemout­h’s first-team coach is targeting a return sometime in the future – as Pompey boss.

The midfielder graduated from the Blues’ youth set-up to make 192 appearance­s and score 17 goals, while also skippering the side on occasions.

After being sold by Harry Redknapp to Middlesbro­ugh in August 2007, he later turned out for West Ham, QPR, Norwich, Bristol City and Bolton.

Yet in the 2020 book Played Up Pompey Three, O’Neil admits that, compared to the Fratton faithful, he never enjoyed the same connection with supporters at the other clubs he played for.

And his fierce ambition is to one day return to Fratton Park as manager.

‘Stewart Downing, a player I knew from my England under-21 days, spotted me in the Middlesbro­ugh treatment room undertakin­g a medical,’ O’Neil told

Played Up Pompey Three.

‘He commented: “The lads told me Gary O’Neil was having his medical. I said no chance. He’s never leaving Pompey, ever”.

‘That’s exactly how I felt

– I didn’t imagine myself being anywhere else.

‘From when I made my debut to the day I hung up my boots, I believed I would be at Fratton Park.

‘That probably wouldn’t have happened considerin­g the club’s subsequent downfall and those tough times. I imagine I would have needed to leave at some point, yet I never thought I would.

‘Maybe I should have stuck around and bided my time rather than joining Middlesbro­ugh.

‘Perhaps I could have let Harry Redknapp put me in the reserves for a few months before commencing my climb back into the first team, but I was given only a couple of days to make a decision.

‘Harry never spoke to me about leaving, an obvious sign he didn’t want me to stay. Pompey had accepted bids from Middlesbro­ugh and Fulham, which said everything.

‘Harry obviously felt it was time for me to move on. Besides, they were receiving a decent fee – £5m. Well, if they don’t want me, then I’ll go. I accepted my fate. ‘Having signed for Middlesbro­ugh on transfer deadline day, I returned to the south coast to collect some stuff, popping into our Eastleigh training ground to say goodbye to my good friends Richard Hughes and Linvoy Primus, plus everybody else. It was an emotional day.

‘One minute I was sitting in my newly-decorated Warsash house with my baby daughter, Summer-Mae, thinking everything was fine, having been Pompey’s captain a few months earlier.

‘Then, within a 24-hour whirlwind, I was gone. After 11 years, 192 appearance­s and 17 goals, I said farewell to Fratton Park. I loved it there and still feel I have unfinished business.

‘I establishe­d a relationsh­ip with the fans which I never had anywhere else in my career.

‘Even though I was from Bromley, in Kent, I did my real growing up at Pompey, this schoolkid who arrived – then left as a Premier League footballer.

‘I’m certain that one day I will manage Portsmouth Football Club, that’s my aim. Hopefully that moment is part of my future.’

O’Neil, left, was appointed Bournemout­h’s first-team coach under Jonathan Woodgate in February 2021.

Following Woodgate’s summer departure, O’Neil stayed on to serve in Scott Parker’s staff.

The Cherries are presently second in the Championsh­ip, just two points adrift of leaders Fulham, although they’ve not won any of their last five matches.

The 38-year-old added: ‘I always thought I’d come back to Pompey and nearly did in January 2009.

‘It was all agreed, but Middlesbro­ugh wouldn’t let me out – and that was that.

‘Tony Adams was now manager and the Blues agreed to pay me the same amount over the duration of my remaining Boro contract, so it was a win-win for me.

‘I would be returning to the south coast, we hadn’t sold our house down there yet, and I could resume what I felt was my pathway, everything fitted perfectly.

‘Middlesbro­ugh had other ideas, though, with (Gareth) Southgate (Boro’s manager at the time) insisting there was no way I was going.

‘As it turned out, I don’t think Pompey could pay as much as Middlesbro­ugh wanted them to.

‘In addition, there were complicati­ons over a sell-on clause from the initial deal, which meant obviously there wouldn’t be money due for Middlesbro­ugh. ‘That was the closest I came, although when I was at Bristol City and having a tough spell with injury, (then Pompey manager) Kenny Jackett rang my agent in March 2018 to say “Just to mark your card, we may be interested in Gary in the summer”.

‘However, by the time that came around he had other ideas and it never really got anywhere, so I instead joined Bolton Wanderers.

‘It was a shame, I would have loved a Fratton Park return. Maybe one day – there’s nothing I want more.’

Gary O’Neil made 192 appearance­s for Pompey and scored 17 times from June 1996 until August 2007.

Played Up Pompey Three is available from Waterstone­s, Pompey’s club shop and Amazon.

Played Up Pompey (paperback) and Pompey: The Island City With A Football Club For A Heart are also on sale from the above.

Alternativ­ely, contact neil.allen@thenews.co.uk for copies autographe­d by those featured in the books, including the signatures of Michael Doyle, Benjani, Alan Knight, Guy Whittingha­m, Martin Kuhl, Sammy Igoe, Dave Munks, Sean Raggett and Lee Brown.

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 ?? ?? I’LL BE BACK Gary O’Neil left Pompey in August 2007 - but dreams of a return as manager one day
I’LL BE BACK Gary O’Neil left Pompey in August 2007 - but dreams of a return as manager one day

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