logo
Hallgrímsson wants to take Ireland on the one road to promised land of World Cup

Hallgrímsson wants to take Ireland on the one road to promised land of World Cup

The 4215-05-2025

HEIMIR HALLGRÍMSSON HAS enjoyed somewhat of a nomadic existence as Republic of Ireland manager so far.
In just under a year in charge he has become accustomed to arranging various short-term stays in various locations around Dublin.
Life in the Castleknock Hotel was a short-term necessity, so too a period by the sea in Malahide. When a suitable rental properly couldn't be tied down, Hallgrímsson has needed to be a regular on Airbnb to arrange digs in one and two-week blocks.
So, it stands to reason that he would continue his travels around the country. A visit to Derry recently came at a time when he also met up with his predecessor, Stephen Kenny, and Shamrock Rovers boss Stephen Bradley.
Josh Honohan's inclusion – one of four players set to earn their first senior cap – is an indication of the manager's willingness to assess League of Ireland talent with a ceiling of potential yet to be reached.
'We want to see him in our environment with these players which is mostly Premier League players. Normally good players can step up when they are with better players,' Hallgrímsson said.
He will continue his travels over the next few days, attending training sessions at both Cork City and Cobh Ramblers.
'And learning a bit about the people there, which they say are a little bit different? Going down to the south capital,' he said, smiling.
'I'm just trying to learn and, at the same time, I think it's respect. If I have time, I should invest it in doing this.'
July, he says, will be a 'rest month' but the plan will also be to visit other parts of the country to continue to get a sense of the dynamic on the ground.
'I'm trying my best to understand the culture, football culture.'
Elements of the grassroots game are fractured, as has been detailed ahead of the planned aligned calendar season coming into effect from January 2026.
Advertisement
'I come from Iceland, I don't come from a really different environment. It's like there, there's kings everywhere. The king of the grass pitch, the king of the facilities etc. It's not so different from back home. It's a lot of volunteer work that drives these clubs. In a sense, it's similar.
'I mean, the groundskeeper was, he owned, he felt like he owned it. That comes with volunteer work. You get the respect that this is mine. That is here, whatever it is. It's just fantastic to see so much volunteer work in clubs. That drives passion in my opinion.'
Success can also prove unifying. 'Without a doubt. I don't know how it is here, I thought it was brilliant how they did it in Iceland, before qualifying [for the World Cup], they said if we qualify, this amount of money will come into football in Iceland. One third goes to the clubs. One third goes to the federation. One third goes to the bonuses and stuff for players and staff and all of that.
'Beforehand everybody was really cheering on because there was benefits to everyone if we were successful. I think it goes hand in hand and I've said it again and again, if the League of Ireland does well, it helps the national team. If the national team does well, I think it helps the League of Ireland and football in Ireland and that is how it should be.'
Hallgrímsson's tour of the country is not just a vacuous charm offensive. He knows that what happens on the pitch will ultimately dictate the mood, and his likelihood of earning a contact beyond the World Cup qualifiers.
'We all know this is a game of results. We all know that. But we plan to go to the World Cup, end of story. We're not even thinking something else.
'I know there hasn't been a lot of confidence in the team but we feel that is growing and our last camp was probably the best one in that we felt it before the game started that there was belief, confidence and energy in the squad, and long may that continue.'
Chiedozie Ogbene's return to fitness aby the time the qualifying campaign kicks off at home to Hungary on 6 September could be a welcome boost. He suffered a ruptured Achilles tendon last October and missed most of this Premier League season with Ipswich.
Hallgrímsson spoke to him last week and revealed the Cork man is back running and aims to be involved for the start of pre-season.
'I think he is going to be really ready when it comes to pre-season. Hopefully we will have everyone ready for September and no serious injuries. He's such an amazing person, always smiling, happy and optimistic.
'With an injury like this you always need to see more positives. It's easy to get dragged down mentally but he's an optimistic person in general.
'It's always nice to call him. He's in a good moment.'
The club futures of a number of his likely starting XI will also be determined in the coming weeks.
Caoimhin Kelleher is almost certain to leave Liverpool while Hallgrímsson believes Dara O'Shea has proven himself to be a player of Premier League calibre despite Ipswich's relegation.
'Ipswich going down shouldn't affect him. He's established himself as a good Premier League centre-back. Others have been in and out, so I don't know. It's always an individual thing.
'I don't expect anything,' Hallgrimsson said of a potential move. 'Coaches and teams will be interested in players who are that consistent, never injured and played every minute. I wouldn't be surprised if teams feel, yeah, this is an established centre-back.'
There is, of course, also uncertainty around Evan Ferguson's club future. He will return to Brighton once his disappointing loan spell at West Ham United concludes at the end of this month.
It means the games against Senegal at Aviva Stadium on 6 June and the trip to Luxembourg four days later will offer the young striker a chance to end the season on a high before Ireland's, and Hallgrímsson's, focus sharpens on a quick-fire qualifying campaign that will be done and dusted against Hungary, Portugal and Armenia between 6 September and 16 November.
'I don't think differently. I plan for success. If you plan for success then you shouldn't talk differently,' Hallgrímsson said. 'I hope I'm not offending anyone but this is how we should all think, we are going there [to the World Cup].
'Everything can happen of course. We can be unlucky in games, with injuries or whatever but we plan for success.
'I've looked at us and that gives me confidence as well rather than looked at others. I think Hungary, us and even Portugal will share points at some time, so I think it even gives us more chance to progress.
'With Iceland we didn't have the best players, not playing at the highest quality but we qualified. That kind of experience gives me hope because I see a lot of similarities with this squad, even players playing here at the higher level than we had in Iceland.
'I really think we have a good chance if we stick together, we believe and we work as one.'
As Hallgrímsson continues to get to grips with the culture here he might just know by now that there is famous song about being on the one road.
If it does indeed lead to North America next summer he will have the freedom of every parish in this country.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fears growing at Leinster that in-demand Jacques Nienaber is on way out
Fears growing at Leinster that in-demand Jacques Nienaber is on way out

Irish Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Fears growing at Leinster that in-demand Jacques Nienaber is on way out

There are growing fears that Jacques Nienaber is on his way from Leinster - and that there is an announcement scheduled for the coming days. The South African, who has spent two full seasons at the Irish province, has been the subject of initially tentative enquiries from French, England clubs and South Africa Rugby, that have now gathered significant pace. These approaches stem from the fact neither Nienaber, who's signed his current deal to July 2026, nor Leinster, have released details of an extension. "Jacques has been part of two Springbok World Cup winning squads and yet is still only an assistant coach at albeit one of the best clubs in the world," says a rugby insider. "But Leinster are not, and never will be, prestigious wage payers and he could probably treble, quadruple his money at some of the bigger Top 14 clubs or at one or two English clubs, depending on their owners' whims." Moreover, the idea that Leinster have finally shaken the trophy winning monkey off their back will add to Nienaber's lustre and Jake White's ringing endorsement last Saturday of the Leinster defence won't have fallen on deaf ears. "It would be wrong of me not to say Jacques' defence was outstanding. We tried bashing their line. They kept us out just before half time and it must have been a massive boost for them. "Credit to Jacques and the defence. We were a little bit one-off instead of running with numbers, people around the ball, but that's what happens when you're under the pump against a good team. 'Just tonight you saw the added value that he does as a defence coach. He's well, well known as that and he made it difficult for us. "We scored seven points and we had scored the second most amount of points in the competition this year and last year it was the most, and the year before it was the most so it just shows that they've obviously bought in to that element of their game. "Stuart Lancaster had a philosophy that was an attack philosophy, Jacques has come in and obviously tightened the defence and now the jigsaw puzzle is coming together because you haven't moved away from attacking and your defence has become much harder to break down. "You have to give credit where credit's due. Out of the three finals, this is by far the toughest final we've had. "Make no bones about it, they've gone another level up. That was Test rugby. It's like everything is in fast forward." The feeling inside the the rugby world though is that Nienaber, if he is set on leaving, has already been approached, knows the destination but, in respect to Leinster, it has been kept in-house. "Jacques is a very conscientious individual and would not want the story at the back end of a season which was fraught with difficulties in Leinster's case, to get diverted to being about him," continues the rugby source Nienaber has previously ruled out returning to South Africa but Rassie Erasmus is keen to have his former colleague as part of the coaching staff - possibly as Head Coach - for a crack at a third successive Rugby World Cup title in 2027 with South Africa. "I don't think Jacques owes Leinster anything, he contributed very much to their success this season. "But with a potential extraordinary treble on offer with South Africa or the possibility of becoming a €1-million per season coach at a wealthy French club the question starts to come down to what he thinks if best for his career and family in the long run." The question as to whether SA Rugby could afford Nienaber is moot, they are already paying Rassie Erasmus 15m Rand (€750k) per annum. French Top 14 clubs have a budget of €7m to allocate to 'coaching staff' any way they see fit while former Munster Head Coach Johan van Graan is estimated to be earning around €600k at Bath. As White says, there would be no shortage of contenders to fill his post should it become vacant. Leinster's machine will purr along nicely and it is nothing like as simple for Bulls. 'All credit to Leo too for bringing in guys like that. Where to for the Bulls? We've got to find ways in which we can catch up because I repeat, Leinster aren't going to come back towards the field. Leinster are going to keep moving forward. 'It's a bit like a Formula One racing car, if your pit stop is three seconds and theirs is two, and you think when you get it to two you could catch them but they've probably on 1.3 by then and you're still behind. 'So credit, as I said, Jacques has added that and I'm sure Leo will find other things they need to get better at. "Our job now is to make sure that we can find ways to fast track whatever we can fast track so that we can compete because we're going to find it hard to beat teams like Croke Park and Aviva if we don't catch up the things we need to catch up.'

Daryl Gurney makes disgusting admission after winning World Cup of Darts for Northern Ireland in dramatic finale
Daryl Gurney makes disgusting admission after winning World Cup of Darts for Northern Ireland in dramatic finale

The Irish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Daryl Gurney makes disgusting admission after winning World Cup of Darts for Northern Ireland in dramatic finale

DARYL GURNEY made a gross revelation after winning the World Cup of Darts. Northern Ireland Germany , with Gurney and his team-mate Josh Rock delighted with the win. Advertisement 3 Daryl Gurney made a shock admission after the World Cup final Credit: Getty 3 Gurney and team-mate Josh Rock were in tears after their win Credit: Getty 3 Northern Ireland beat Wales 10-9 in a tense thriller Credit: Getty The pair were put through the emotional wringer after missing five match darts . The match against Wales went down to the final leg as Gerwyn Price and Jonny Clayton refused to accept defeat. And Gurney, who missed four of those match darts before sealing the win by hitting double eight, revealed nerves almost got the better of him. He told Sky Sports: 'Firstly congratulations to Wales . They showed their class. Jonny and Gezzy, absolute legends of the game. Advertisement READ MORE IN DARTS 'Josh had the power-scoring and I just had to clean up the finishing. 'I hope I don't get a fine for this but every time I went for double five a wee bit of poo fell out! 'I was never going to miss double eight. I have never been so proud of this man and myself.' Gurney and Rock Advertisement Most read in Darts BEST FREE BETS AND BETTING SIGN UP OFFERS They will collect an £80,000 jackpot and Rock felt the win was never in doubt. He said: 'When we said we are paired together we'll win it. We didn't expect to do it, but we did it. 'Stupid' - Josh Rock hits out at 'disrespectful' World Cup of Darts rival's on-stage antics 'As a team we were fantastic. We fought hard all the way through.' Advertisement

Man City ready to take huge loss on Jack Grealish with Napoli deciding between him and Man Utd exile Garnacho
Man City ready to take huge loss on Jack Grealish with Napoli deciding between him and Man Utd exile Garnacho

The Irish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Man City ready to take huge loss on Jack Grealish with Napoli deciding between him and Man Utd exile Garnacho

NAPOLI have £45million to spend on Jack Grealish or Alejandro Garnacho — but they will not take both. The Italian champs laid down the law to Manchester rivals 6 Jack Grealish is set to leave Man City this summer Credit: Getty 6 Alejandro Garnacho is like to depart Old Trafford Credit: Getty United want £70m for Garnacho but are yet to receive an offer for the 20-year-old However, City will be prepared to accept a fee of around £45m for Grealish, 29, who Pep Guardiola axed SunSport understands Napoli would love to reunite Grealish with City legend Kevin De Bruyne, who signed a two-year deal on Thursday to end a trophy-laden ten years at the Etihad. READ MORE IN FOOTBALL Grealish, who became England's first £100m player when he signed from However, it is unlikely City would receive a £45m offer from a Premier League club — meaning a loan would be his only option to stay in England. Prem sides would also be unlikely to pay Grealish's £230,000-a-week wages in full. Most read in Football BEST ONLINE CASINOS - TOP SITES IN THE UK 6 Antonio Conte guided Napoli to the Serie A title Credit: Getty Guardiola snubbed him in key games at the end of the season, including for the 1-0 FA Cup final defeat to The City boss preferred to hand 19-year-old Claudio Echeverri his debut and leave Grealish on the bench as his side desperately chased a leveller in the closing stages at Wembley. Jack Grealish has gone from eye-catching showman and heartthrob to miserable bench warmer - and I know who's to blame It cost Grealish a place in Tuchel's squad for England's recent 1-0 World Cup qualifying win over Andorra and 3-1 friendly defeat to Garnacho would prefer to stay in the Premier League but United's £70m price tag has put off suitors. The Argentine winger was left out of Ruben Amorim's starting line-up for the Europa League final defeat to Tottenham and only went on as a late substitute. Boss Amorim then told Garnacho to find a new club this summer. 6 6 Meanwhile, Inter are interested in taking the 22-year-old to the San Siro on loan next season, with a view to a permanent deal in 2026. United would prefer the cash now as they look to give the manager extra funds to make changes. Former Atalanta forward Hojlund scored just four Prem goals last season — ten in all competitions — and looked short of confidence by the end. Yet his stock remains high in Italy and Inter are looking to take him back to Serie A — although they are reluctant to stump up United's £38m asking price. 6

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store