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26th January 2019
11:39am GMT

"From my point of view and I'd say 99% of the players, we didn't want it to happen. "It's one of those things. You go in in the morning, go in for a little bit of treatment and you realise there's little mini cameras dotted around."https://twitter.com/5liveSport/status/1088893032865312768 The likes of Darron Gibson and Aiden McGeady both spoke on camera, but O'Shea says he was glad that the eight-part doc featured many of those, behind the scenes, that keep the club ticking over. "The few bits I've seen," he said, "I'm glad the people of the club in the canteen, the player liaison officer, the kit men, they are really good people and I'm glad they have come out of it looking well.
"The club itself is an amazing, amazing club and I loved every minute of it as it's a great place to play football. Yes the fans are passionate and vociferous but who doesn't want that? "I'm glad it's getting good reviews. The people behind it were good people. You got to know the camera people but how things can be portrayed, with clever editing, for some of it I'd say it definitely came out unfair on some people. "That's just how it was at the time as it was a negative story. It wasn't going to come out positive on everybody."Sunderland are currently third in League One, four points off leaders Portsmouth but with a game in hand.
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