Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
technology/web

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Brian O'Neil (footballer, born 1972)

Scottish footballer


Summary

Scottish footballer

FieldValue
nameBrian O'Neil
fullnameBrian O'Neil
birth_date
birth_placePaisley, Scotland
positionMidfielder
years11991–1997
clubs1Celtic
caps1119goals1 = 8
years21997
clubs2→ Nottingham Forest (loan)
caps25goals2 = 0
years31997–1998
clubs3Aberdeen
caps329goals3 = 1
years41998–2000
clubs4VfL Wolfsburg
caps450goals4 = 3
years52000–2003
clubs5Derby County
caps517goals5 = 0
years62003–2006
clubs6Preston North End
caps6112goals6 = 5
totalcaps332totalgoals = 17
nationalyears11996–2005
nationalteam1Scotland
nationalcaps17
nationalgoals10

Brian O'Neil (born 6 September 1972) is a Scottish former professional footballer, who played as a defensive midfielder for Celtic, Nottingham Forest, Aberdeen, Wolfsburg, Derby County, Preston North End and the Scotland national team. O'Neil was forced to retire from playing in October 2006 due to long standing injury problems.

Club career

Celtic

O'Neil started his career at Celtic, where he played 155 competitive games in almost every outfield position and scored 10 times. Highlights of his time at Celtic Park include scoring an injury time winner in October 1993 against now-deceased Glasgow rivals Rangers at Ibrox and an extra time winner against Aberdeen in October 1994 in the semi-final of the Scottish League Cup.

Nottingham Forest loan

In 1997, O'Neil was loaned out to Nottingham Forest but returned to Celtic after the end of the loan period after Nottingham Forest failed in bids to buy him at the end of the season.

Aberdeen

In 1997, Aberdeen agreed a fee of £850,000 for O'Neil. He played for them in 29 league games, scoring once, in a game against Dunfermline.{{cite web

Wolfsburg

O'Neil joined German club VfL Wolfsburg for £350,000 and spent two and a half successful seasons in the Bundesliga, during which time they qualified for the UEFA Cup for the first time in their history (they were eliminated by Atlético Madrid in the fifth round). O'Neil enjoyed cult status in Wolfsburg during his period there and remains a popular figure in the club's history.

Derby County

In November 2000, O'Neil returned to England to sign for Premiership club Derby County, but six operations in two seasons limited him to 17 appearances. In November 2003, after a dispute with the club's chief executive, he was released from his contract.

Preston North End

Following his release from Derby, O'Neil joined Preston North End. He enjoyed relative success with the Deepdale club, scoring 5 times in 110 games and becoming well-regarded by Preston supporters for his calm play and fine passing in the centre of the pitch. During his time at the club he helped Preston to the play-off final in 2005 only to lose to West Ham United. His final game for Preston was another play-off defeat, this time in the 2006 semi-final to Leeds United. O'Neil was subsequently injured and forced to retire the following season in October 2006.

International career

O'Neil played for the Scotland U16 team in the 1989 FIFA Under 16 World Cup which was hosted by Scotland. In front of a crowd of 28,555 at Tynecastle, in the semi-final against a Portugal team comprising future stars such as Luís Figo and Abel Xavier, O'Neil scored the only goal to take Scotland into the final. Scotland drew 2–2 with Saudi Arabia after extra time in the final, and lost 5–4 on penalties. O'Neil missed a penalty late on in the second half and then a penalty in the shoot-out.

O'Neil played for his country seven times at senior level, making his debut in March 1996 in a 1–0 win over Australia at Hampden. He won a recall to the squad after five years away for Walter Smith's Scotland squads in the early part of 2005. He won what proved to be his last cap in August 2005, in a 2–2 draw against Austria.

Post-playing career

In 2010, it was announced that O'Neil had signed up for Preston North End's team in the Masters Football Tournament in Liverpool. He played along with Sean Gregan, Lee Cartwright and Andy Fensome.

References

References

  1. {{Hugman. 14990
  2. "don't look back in anger". ntvcelticfanzine.com.
  3. (29 August 2010). "Celtic 1 – 0 Motherwell, Scottish League (29/08/2010)". Fitbastats.com.
  4. (13 November 2000). "O'Neil joins Derby as Schnoor heads home". The Guardian.
  5. Bright, Richard. (28 November 2002). "Derby let two more players go". The Telegraph.
  6. (6 October 2006). "O'Neil retires because of injury". BBC Sport.
  7. (24 June 2009). "U16 World Cup Squad of 1989 Reunite". Scottishfa.co.uk.
  8. Paul, Ian. (21 June 1989). "Young Scots through to final". The Glasgow Herald.
  9. Paul, Ian. (26 June 1989). "Bright future despite the cup gloom". The Glasgow Herald.
  10. McGuigan, Shaughan. (30 September 2011). "SCOTLAND, DESPAIR AND THE WORLD CUP FINAL". inbedwithmaradona.com.
  11. (27 March 1996). "Scotland Player Brian O'Neil Details". Fitbastats.com.
  12. (15 March 2005). "WALTER SMITH NAMES SCOTLAND SQUAD FOR ITALY". Scottish Football Association.
  13. (17 August 2005). "Austria 2–2 Scotland". BBC.
  14. "O'Neil Is The Third Master".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Brian O'Neil (footballer, born 1972) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report