
Carlo Ancelotti says first Brazil match was ‘special' despite goalless draw
Brazil were held to a goalless draw away to Ecuador in Carlo Ancelotti's first match in charge but the Italian still described his international debut as a manager as a 'special' gift.
Clear-cut chances were limited during a lacklustre 90 minutes at Estadio Monumental with Brazil only able to manage two shots on target.
Ancelotti included a number of Premier League players in his first line-up with Alisson Becker, Bruno Guimaraes, Casemiro and Richarlison handed starts, but the 0-0 draw keeps Brazil in fourth spot in the South America World Cup qualification standings.
My first match in charge of a national team, my heart felt something special
The veteran coach, who started his managerial career in 1995, told CBF.com: 'My first match in charge of a national team, my heart felt something special.
'I was on the bench for more than 1,800 matches and this one was special. I think I can make an assessment of this first period; I was happy with the reception. I feel delighted to work with the CBF and, for me, it is a gift to be here.'
The former Real Madrid boss, who has won five Champions League titles, acknowledged Brazil could improve with the ball ahead of his home debut with Paraguay in Sao Paulo on Tuesday, with Barcelona attacker Raphinha set to return after suspension.
'It was a very good match defensively,' Ancelotti reflected.
'I saw the team playing better with the ball, with a slightly more fluid game. It was a good draw and we left satisfied, with confidence for the next game.
'We have very good quality players. There is not much time to work, but there is the possibility of improvement because we have quality.
'I am sure that we will improve in attack. Today we were missing an important player (in) Raphinha.
'We have to play a game with more rhythm, mobility and intensity. I believe we will do that at our home ground.'
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Irish Examiner
26 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
McAteer strikes as Hallgrimsson belatedly introduced to Ireland's 1-1 trademark
International Friendly: Rep of Ireland 1 (McAteer 21') Senegal 1 (Sarr 82') A first draw of the Heimir Hallgrímsson era is one he will extrapolate multiple minor victories from. The manager with a symmetrical record of wins and defeats from his opening eight games at the helm got the performance he demanded against a side of similar standing to the top seeds Portugal in their upcoming World Cup qualifying group. What he didn't get in his first friendly was the morale of beating the aristocrats, as eight minutes from the end, Ismaila Sarr ghosted in to cancel out a 21st-minute opener by Kasey McAteer. He'd been belatedly introduced to Ireland's trademark 1-1 habit. Teams don't rise to 19th in the world without possessing quality in abundance and proof the Senegalese were treating this trip to Europe as a 180-minute exercise was evidenced by them leaving a string of talent such as Nicolas Jackson and the pair of Sarrs, Pape Matar and Ismaila on the bench. England on Tuesday constitutes their priority. The Premier League was among six top leagues across Europe where the Senegalese play, with the vast majority based in France. Both Racing Strasbourg and Stade Reims had representatives but their Irish players, Andrew Omobamidele and John Patrick Finn, had to make do with places on the bench. Hallgrímsson's idyllic plan to reach consistency of selection diminished once the World Cup draw predicated two friendlies instead of qualifiers in this summer window. Granting Josh Cullen, Mikey Johnston and Finn Azaz an extended break after their Championship exertions robbed him of three starters but offered others scope to impress. Hallgrímsson could still select what seems to be his preferred back five for this friendly, backboned by goalkeeper Caoimhín Kelleher who for the first time in his international career didn't have Liverpool attached to his name. That the new Brentford capture didn't have a save to make until the 52nd minute said much for how Ireland had contained their illustrious opponents who'd won the African Cup of Nations in 2021. They'd also amassed a sequence of seven clean sheets dating back 630 minutes to last September but it would last only another 20 minutes on their trip to Dublin. McAteer was the scorer and it was a dividend of his explosive start on his first start. Operating on the right, he struck that balance of drifting wide and cutting in, epitomised by the 14th minute chance he created by chopping from his right to his left for a cross that Jack Taylor arrived fractionally late to connect with. Taylor was also sampling for the first time the joys of getting the nod, seamlessly slotting into that conduit between midfield and attack occupied of late under this regime by Azaz. Ireland won the corner count by five to two in the first half and from the second – conceded by Antoine Mendy – they forged into the lead. Jason Knight and Matt Doherty were still arguing from colliding trying at the back post from Will Smallbone's corner when Ryan Manning scooped the ball back into the centre. When towering Nathan Collins flicked the delivery onto McAteer, his header was arcing towards the top corner until Yevhann Diouf pawed the effort away. First to react to the loose ball, however, was the Leicester City winger who showed brilliant control before swivelling to sweep a shot under the scrambling 'keeper. A goal to the good, Ireland maintained their stride by retaining possession rather than aimlessly clear to opponents capable of inflicting punishment. Doherty's sublime feign to release Manning down the left had the crowd of 32,478 baying for more goals but the Southampton man's cutback was blocked for a corner. McAteer proved he could mix up his game too, scampering back to the other side to tackle Habib Diarra just as he looked to pick out a killer pass. As the interval loomed, Diarra did succeed in giving Doherty the slip inside the box, only to slip himself, much to the amusement of the crowd. Senegal trudged to the dressing-room frustrated by their sole chance coming inside the opening two minutes through an Irish player. Dara O'Shea unwittingly deflected a corner marginally wide of his own post. The same Irish player gifted Abdallah Sima a sight on goal within 10 seconds of the restart and he was relieved to watch his effort skew well wide. Inevitably, the side of superior prowess would respond in the second half but only after they survived a clearcut chance for Ireland to extend their lead. A trademark interception by Knight two minutes into the second half allowed Smallbone to advance on goal. Rather than lay off for the unmarked Manning, he stung the palms of the goalkeeper with a left-footed effort. Manning did get a stab to the rebound, yet a touch took it around the near post. Adam Idah has chased a lone furrow up top but an injury sustained by Taylor when making a tackle eventually led him to be replaced by Evan Ferguson. Neither got much traction in the attacking third as the flamboyance of the guests increased with every substitute they unlocked. With a better centre from Manning, Idah might have pounced while there was a penalty claim on the hour when a cross from McAteer struck the arm of Ismail Jakobs. Otherwise, the Senegalese were the ones carrying the cutting edge. Sarr was only on as a sub when he followed in a deflected shot to spin his effort onto the post. That was with 22 minutes remaining and a signal of what was coming. Kelleher's resistance was finally breached with seven minutes left. Despite stooping low to repel Cherif Ndiaye's shot with his legs, fellow sub Sarr was on hand to tuck the ball inside the post. Cheikh Sabaly then sent his diving header off-target and Lamine Camara's stoppage-time free-kick was blocked by the wall. Calmness came after the chaos and satisfaction will linger while the countdown to Hungary on September 6 continues. IRELAND: C Kelleher; M Doherty (J O'Brien 67), N Collins, D O'Shea, R Brady (L Scales 85); J Knight, W Smallbone (A Moran 81); K McAteer (F Ebosele 81), J Taylor (E Ferguson 58), R Manning (K Phillips 67); A Idah. SENEGAL: Y Diouf; A Mendy, L Camara Mamadou (C Sabaly 77), A Seck, I Jakobs (E Diouf 85); H Diarra, I Ndiaye, K Diattta (L Camara 63); A Sima (I Sarr 63), A Diallo, B Dia (C Ndiaye 77). Referee: A Ladeback (SWE) Attendance: 32,478


Irish Examiner
26 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
'Dream come true' for McAteer as he scores his first senior goal in a palyer of the match performance
Kasey McAteer revealed that his first senior goal for the Republic of Ireland was like a 'dream come true'. The 23-year-old put the Boys in Green ahead on Friday in the international friendly against Senegal at the Aviva Stadium 'I'm over the moon. You can tell by my celebrations - it was like a dream come through' beamed the Leicester City wide man. 'It was my first start at the Aviva. Hopefully, there's many more to come. It was good to get myself on the scoresheet. It was a shame that we couldn't hold on for the result to get the win. Senegal are a really good team. We'll take it in our stride.' The visitors came into the contest unbeaten in 20 fixtures. But the ending when both teams flared up didn't have the feeling of an end of season friendly. 'We went into the game saying it wasn't a friendly. For us, it was about having a good performance. And getting a result. Both teams wanted to win the game. That's the nature of it. We want to win every game we play. It was a good game. But we were unlucky we couldn't hold on in the end' stated McAteer. The winger only found out that was in the first 11 of the Irish starting line-up late on Thursday evening. 'I only found out last night. I was buzzing when the gaffer (Heimir Hallgrímsson) told me. So I had to switch my mind to focus on the game, and give my all for the team. And the country. Hopefully, the fan saw me do that tonight.' On his goal, and only the second score that the African side had conceded in their last 741 minutes of football in all competitions, McAteer said 'It was a great save by their keeper. I was surprised that he saved it. I thought 'oh no'. But luckily it ricocheted into my path, and I took a touch then just from point blank, it went in. So, I'm over the moon with that.' He added 'It was all about instinct. I'm not going to miss from there. If I miss from there, there's going to be a problem. I'm just over the moon to score my first goal.' The Foxes player believes there is a bot of momentum around the Irish squad presently. 'We had two good results in the last camp. We've now had a good result tonight against a really good team in the end. They are ranked higher than us. Not many teams get results against them. We have to look after ourselves going into the next game (against Luxembourg on Tuesday) and try to get the win there.' With the World Cup qualifiers looming in September, McAteer put his name into the reckoning for the right side of attack position up for grabs. 'Listen, we've got some great players, the likes of Festy (Ebosele). He's really pushing, We can push each other together to get better. The main thing is to get to the World Cup. That's our aim. Every friendly game, we need to build and build. Hopefully, we can get ourselves there in the future.'


The Irish Sun
34 minutes ago
- The Irish Sun
Kasey McAteer strikes on full debut as familiar flaws haunt Republic of Ireland in Senegal draw
A McATEER goal, a tongue-lashing from a Cork man, and a cheap goal given away. The more things change in Irish football, the more they stay the same. 2 Kasey McAteer scored his first Ireland goal on his full debut on Friday evening 2 Ireland conceded a late goal as Senegal earned a draw in Dublin through Ismailia Sarr Kasey McAteer was not born when his namesake Jason scored against Holland on September 1, 2001, his goal pushing Ireland a little further along the path to their third, and most recent, appearance at a World Cup finals. He arrived into the world 82 days later and, so, may have been spared the endless yearning for the olden days because, well, they were better than the last couple of decades. But he was no less trigger-happy as he scored the opening goal in a victory which threatened to end the longest current unbeaten run in international football. Instead, Ismaila Sarr's 82d minute equaliser ensured it stretched to 20 games. MOST READ IN FOOTBALL It undoubtedly took the shine off things but, having been dominated in the first half, Senegal found their form in the second. McAteer's 21st minute opener was no more than he deserved because, on his first international start, he was Ireland's most dangerous player. It was his probing run which had, indirectly, led to a chance for Will Smallbone. Earlier, he had delivered a cross which Jack Taylor narrowly failed to meet. Still, it did not spare him a tongue-lashing later on in the half from Adam Idah who assumed the role of Roy Keane. Most read in Football The Celtic striker was less than happy with the winger's inability to get his cross past the Senegal defence when he was in a good position. McAteer argued that there were four opponents in between whilst Idah queried his counting. 'Don't say that on camera' - Nathan Collins' admission about Caoimhin Kelleher's move leaves Heimir in stitches It was not the only time that Ireland players were involved in a heated on-pitch discussion. In fact, Matt Doherty and Dara O'Shea may have done well to see McAteer's goal as their post-mortem into what happened in the first phase from Smallbone's corner continued. The stationary O'Shea and Doherty - who ran from deep - both competed for the same ball and, inevitably, neither made a connection. When the ball was recycled, McAteer saw his first effort turned onto the bar by keeper Yehvann Diouf but he was not about to let them off a second time. Turning sharply in the box, he thumped the ball home. It was a perfect pick-me-up at the end of a season in which most of his football came after the relegation of Leicester City - the club he has been with since he was eight - had been confirmed. The Northampton native - with a grandmother from Offaly and grandfather from Belfast - understandably savoured the moment. And the sight of the ball rippling in the net ensured that the recriminations between half of Ireland's back four immediately became less animated. But maybe it is no bad thing to see Ireland's players holding each other to account. Remember, it is only nine months since Glenn Whelan - who had previously been part of the coaching staff during John O'Shea's interim reign - had questioned whether losing games hurt as much as it should. They had, it must be said, plenty of practice to perfect their reaction to defeat. Whilst Senegal arrived here having lost just once in 30 games, Ireland had been beaten 16 times in the same sample. This was the first time the African team had faced opposition from outside their own continent since the last 16 of the World Cup in December 2022, when they faced England. They were beaten 3-0 that day and their team selection from this game was clearly built around resting some of their big guns ahead of their visit to Wembley on Tuesday. Ireland - having lost 5-0 in London as recently in November - are not in a position where they can really quibble with that approach. And, as they chased increased confidence and further momentum ahead of the start of the World Cup qualifying campaign in September, facing a line-up which was not quite as strong as a FIFA world ranking of 19 was perhaps no bad thing. The fingertips of Caoimhín Kelleher were pressed into more action earlier in the week when he signed for Brentford than they were in the first half. He was busier after the break and had made two good saves before, eventually, he was beaten after a sequence of errors at the back, culminating in the ball falling into the path of the Crystal Palace striker after the keeper's initial save with his leg. That came just two minutes after McAteer had been withdrawn. The crowd rose to acclaim him when he exited the pitch. For a moment, it looked like Idah went over to congratulate him. It turned out he was looking for a bottle of water. But he was rewarded with the player-of-the-match award. He would, presumably, have preferred to have finished the night with a match-winning goal. LUXEMBOURG CLASH But, if one of the objectives of this game and Tuesday's in Luxembourg is to unearth players who could have a role in the World Cup campaign, then it served its purpose. Heimir Hallgrímsson has been quick to credit predecessor Stephen Kenny for his work in blooding youngsters to ensure that he inherited a squad with more experience than one might expect from its age profile. Kenny's final act in terms of recruitment was to get McAteer on board, although the paperwork was not completed until August last year. Up until now, he had clocked up 43 minutes in a green shirt, his lack of regular game-time for Leicester making it difficult to make the case that he should get more. Here he got 80 and he made good use of them.