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Michael Walker: Keith Andrews and Brentford bid to defy Premier League doubters

Michael Walker: Keith Andrews and Brentford bid to defy Premier League doubters

Irish Times4 days ago
Keith Andrews
was on the touchline looking and sounding very much the modern head coach. It was at QPR's Loftus Road last Saturday afternoon and Andrews was speaking following
Brentford
's preseason friendly victory over their west London neighbours.
'A good representation of where we are as a group,' Andrews said of a 1-0 win; 'three-quarters of the way through preseason, 15 days away from Nottingham Forest.'
He praised the players' athleticism and structure – 'with and without the ball.' He praised the goalscorer,
Nathan Collins
. Collins had just been announced as Brentford's new captain, one of Andrews' first significant decisions as head coach. The two men have known each other, Andrews said, since he coached Collins at Irish under-age level. Andrews spoke of Collins's 'maturity and respect from his peers'. Brentford's clean sheet, meanwhile, was kept by
Caoimhín Kelleher
.
Andrews's reference to Forest came because Brentford's season opens at the City Ground on Sunday week. The Bees won there 2-0 in May, so comparisons will be natural. This is the same Brentford of the past four
Premier League
seasons, only different. Suddenly it is a club with, if not an Irish spine, then important Irish vertebrae: Andrews-Kelleher-Collins. Manager-keeper-captain.
READ MORE
Kevin O'Connor can be added to that. An Ireland under-21 international two decades ago, O'Connor made more than 500 appearances for Brentford and has club-legend status. He is one of four assistant coaches, all at the same level, under Andrews.
After seven years as head coach, and two before that as assistant, Thomas Frank has left for Tottenham. It's a loss and Frank took three of Brentford's trusted coaching staff with him. The club's captain of the past two seasons, midfielder Christian Norgaard, has also departed for a north London club, Arsenal, and keeper Mark Flekken has joined Bayer Leverkusen; then Manchester United moved for the Bees' signature player and top scorer last season, 20-goal Bryan Mbeumo.
With each departure, eyebrows rose and they will be at Ancelotti levels should Yoane Wissa exit as well.
Nathan Collins has been appointed Brentford's club captain for the season ahead. Photograph:Brentford finished 10th in the Premier League last season and are unquestionably one of the great sports-business football club success stories of the past decade. But physical change has an effect on perception and, to many, Brentford 2025 appear newly vulnerable rather than reliably solid. In appointing Andrews, 45 next month and in a frontline managerial role for the first time, this clever club looks to have inserted some risk into their succession strategy.
One-nil victories over QPR in preseason are hardly the stuff of audits, but those will start soon enough. Andrews's suitability for such a high-profile and demanding post will be assessed from his first team sheet and opinion will be delivered fast and potentially furiously through a start to the league season interrupted by international breaks in September, October and November.
An unfortunate reality for Andrews, as with any number one, is the level of Premier League scrutiny internally as well as externally. Also unfortunate for Andrews is the likelihood that he was, if not the cheapest option, then close to it and that means Brentford can cut losses early without feeling they have committed too much money on this decision. Here is a club that believes in itself, in its methods, its structure – personnel come and go.
This may sound unnecessarily pessimistic, but it is professional football's reality, or at least one of them. Another is that Brentford are as well-run or better-run than most clubs in Britain. Frank won only one of his first 10 matches in charge but Brentford retained faith. He lost a Championship play-off final against Fulham and Brentford retained faith. They had seen Frank day to day. They knew him and his work.
Caoimhín Kelleher is likely to see a lot more action this season than he has in his Premier League career to date. Photograph:The same applies to Andrews, who joined the Bees as a set-piece coach last summer and made an impact via those fast-start first-minute goals. At his unveiling as head coach, Andrews was joined by Phil Giles, Brentford's measured, experienced director of football who chipped in when the conversation turned to Andrews's job interview. Neither club nor Andrews were 'starting from scratch', Giles said, adding, 'he's been interviewing for 12 months'.
Giles noted that 'the staff like him and respect him', which is no small matter. Familiarity has bred sufficient mutual contentedness for both Andrews and Brentford to first contemplate, then complete this deal. All the same, Andrews, who has been in the professional game since joining Wolves as a boy in the late 1990s, understands its hardness from the inside.
At that unveiling he said he had received 'no assurances' regarding job security and his tone when speaking to in-house media may surprise those in football who have never accused Andrews of diffidence – 'pretty humbled would be the overriding feeling'.
Keith Andrews has been putting a brave face on the challenge ahead with Brentford. Photograph:He also stressed his route to this point, including a playing career that was down as well as up – his first full Irish cap came at 28 – and the variety of experiences means he feels prepared. He started his B-Licence at Blackburn Rovers at 29, coaching their under-14s. There were stints as assistant at MK Dons and Sheffield United and of course with Stephen Kenny with Ireland. 'A very deliberate path,' Andrews called it.
Managing Brentford could seem like a logical outcome therefore, but he knows it isn't. 'I'm very appreciative of the owner, the board and the staff that have supported this decision. It's an opportunity I'm capable of doing, I'm ready; equally, I realise it is not the done thing in normal football clubs.
'But I don't think we're a normal football club.'
It isn't, as the patience mentioned above demonstrates. Even last season Brentford conceded more goals at home than relegated Leicester, yet accumulated 56 points. Those tipping them for relegation next May must anticipate a collapse of 30 points and they're omitting Kelleher's arrival, plus other recruitment, something at which Brentford excel.
Even if the Bees' trend of conceding chances continues – and Andrews' desire is 'we want to have an edge, play dynamic, relentless football' – then week-in, week-out Kelleher, at age 26, should prove what a talent he is.
For Collins the captaincy is also a moment – Andrews could have offered it to Jordan Henderson (35) inbound from Ajax. Instead it is Collins, recently turned 24. He played in all 38 league games last season. His early form with the armband will be monitored closely by
Heimir Hallgrímsson
and everyone else as Hungary's visit to Dublin looms 29 days away.
Brentford's form in general will be the subject of unusually high Irish attention. Questions previously unforeseen will be asked: can the returning-from-injury Igor Thiago, worth €34.5 million a year ago, replace Mbeumo's goals? Will Andrews be a tracksuit, suit or knitwear manager?
The latter has been asked already. Andrews replied: 'I'll be me.'
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Seán Moran: Sabotaging the often dashed and lonely dreams of Limerick football
Seán Moran: Sabotaging the often dashed and lonely dreams of Limerick football

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  • Irish Times

Seán Moran: Sabotaging the often dashed and lonely dreams of Limerick football

The late Liam Kearns was in great humour in Páirc Uí Chaoimh back in May, 2003. The former Kerry footballer, who guided Limerick to an All-Ireland Under-21 final in 2000, was now in charge of the Limerick seniors. They had just beaten Munster champions Cork in the provincial first round. It was the county's first A-list championship scalp – Cork or Kerry – since 1965. A big deal. More startlingly, it was achieved pulling away at the end of a comprehensive 10-point victory. By now, we were into the third year of the All-Ireland qualifiers and Kearns testified to the extent to which the new format had psychologically liberated underdogs from the pressures of sudden death and helped them perform. 'The qualifiers helped us big time,' he said. 'They gave us confidence last year.' READ MORE It wasn't the only source of confidence within the previous year. In the 2002 league – when that year's All-Ireland finalists, Armagh and Kerry, had spent the spring in Division Two before getting promoted – Limerick beat Kerry for the first time in an elite football competition. In fact, under today's rules, Limerick, having finished level on 10 points, would have gone up on the basis of head-to-head results. I was reminded of these days by the ongoing disagreement in Munster concerning the changing of championship rules to the advantage of Cork. By settling on a qualification process about which the contestants can now do nothing – seeding determined by final league position when Cork are the only county besides Kerry in either of the top two divisions – the provincial council has caused unhappiness in the other four counties' football teams. Crucially, that unhappiness wasn't shared by Limerick's administrators, who voted to introduce the new format despite the objections of their football team. Limerick's John Quane and Seamus O'Donnell celebrate their victory against Cork in the Munster Senior Football Championship first round in 2003. Photograph: Tom Honan/Inpho That is an ongoing matter but it focuses attention on the whole question of provincial championships. In many ways, former Clare manager Colm Collins was correct when expressing on these pages the opinion that the Munster championship was broken. It was, in his more blunt assessment, 'a joke' that pitches the best team in Ireland against an array of lower-division opponents. As manager of his county for 10 years, Collins had Clare in Division Two of the league for seven of those seasons – finishing as Munster's second county ahead of Cork on five occasions. Within two years of Clare getting relegated to Division Three, suddenly league positions will determine semi-final seeding. It is easy to see why Collins and others might see little justice in the provincial system, but whereas Clare in 1992 and Tipperary 28 years later managed to break through the barrier of disadvantage and win Munster, Limerick footballers have been the ones most consistently tilting at the windmill. As far back as the first open draw in Munster 34 years ago, Limerick reached the provincial final and lost by just two points under the management of another former Kerry player, John O'Keeffe. They followed up the above referenced sensational win over Cork in 2003 by losing the provincial final to Kerry by just five points, having failed to make a fiery opening pay on the scoreboard and also having missed two penalties. A year later, it took a phenomenal catch by Darragh Ó Sé over his own bar to prevent Kerry losing the final in Limerick. They prevailed a week later in Killarney. Dara Ó Cinnéide was the Kerry captain who would lift Sam Maguire two months later in Jack O'Connor's first year in charge. He said that Limerick had pushed them all the way in a year when they felt they were well in contention for the All-Ireland and that their opponents should reset immediately because they had nothing to fear in the qualifiers. Limerick's Tommie Childs is tackled by Kildare's Brendan Gibbons and Brian Byrne in the Tailteann Cup final at Croke Park. Photograph: Tom O'Hanlon/Inpho That practical advice to put the disappointment to one side and get on with it was easier for serial winners Kerry than for a county which would have seen little difference between the Munster title and an All-Ireland – at least in the journey to be travelled between one and the other. In history, Limerick footballers have two 19th-century All-Ireland titles, including the very first one in 1887, which was open draw, and 1896. So the county actually has more All-Irelands than Munsters. 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Andy Moran's selection as Mayo football boss sparks hype and considerable hope among the faithful
Andy Moran's selection as Mayo football boss sparks hype and considerable hope among the faithful

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Andy Moran's selection as Mayo football boss sparks hype and considerable hope among the faithful

Andy Moran's appointment as Mayo senior football manager has prodded a renewal of two idling characteristics long associated with Mayo fandom – hype and hope. And though it is true neither ever tended to stir far from the surface, it is also true that the hype train hasn't been stuffed with hope when pulling out of the station at the outset of any season recently. It is coming up on five years since Mayo contested an All-Ireland senior football final. Between 2012 and 2021 Mayo played in seven Sam Maguire showdowns – including a replay. During those years, there weren't enough carriages to cater for all the hope. READ MORE But Mayo haven't managed to even negotiate a pathway back to an All-Ireland semi-final since 2021 – exiting at the quarter-final stages twice (2022 v Kerry, 2023 v Dublin), the preliminary quarter-finals once (2024 v Derry) and at the group stages this year following defeat to Donegal in their last game. 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Photograph: Inpho This will be the 11th different management team taking charge of the Mayo senior footballers over the last three decades since John Maughan's first term in 1996. Maughan had two spells in charge, as did James Horan, while Pat Holmes returned too, but with Noel Connelly by his side in 2015. Mickey Moran spent just one year in the wheelhouse, John O'Mahony was the manager between 2007-2010, Stephen Rochford was there for three years while McStay also lasted three seasons. Over those 30 years, Mayo won 13 Connacht senior titles – Horan was in charge for six, Maughan for four, O'Mahony one, Moran one and the Holmes-Connelly partnership one. Remarkably, apart from McStay, Moran played with Mayo under all of those managers at some point. He made his senior debut in 2003 and retired in 2019. He was named Footballer of the Year in 2017 and throughout his career, the former Mayo captain scored a staggering 22-226 in the green and red. A two-time All Star, Moran won eight Connacht senior football titles, a Division One league crown and played in six All-Ireland finals. He arrives to the position of Mayo manager at 41 years of age and by way of a three-year stint in charge of Leitrim and one season as a coach with Monaghan. He also had a spell as part of the Mayo under-20 management team in 2020 and was joint manager of his home club, Ballaghaderreen, in 2021. But the Mayo dressingroom he will enter is very different from the one he walked out of in 2019. His final game was an All-Ireland semi-final defeat to Dublin – among those who played for Mayo that day were Rob Hennelly, Lee Keegan, Chris Barrett, Colm Boyle, Donal Vaughan, Séamus O'Shea, Keith Higgins, Tom Parsons and Kevin McLoughlin. In fact, of all the players who featured over the course of that game, only Matthew Ruane, Aidan O'Shea, Stephen Coen, Patrick Durcan, Diarmuid O'Connor and Fergal Boland played in Mayo's defeat to Donegal earlier this summer. Kuba Callaghan of Ballaghaderreen (right) may be in line for a call from new the new Mayo boss. Photograph: Inpho The make-up of Moran's squad is already eagerly anticipated, with one key question dangling with bells on – will Cillian O'Connor return? O'Connor scored 0-6 last weekend as Ballintubber beat Charlestown in the Mayo SFC. In stepping away from the county team last November, O'Connor did not say he was retiring, so Moran might try to entice his former team-mate back to the fold. It will also be interesting to see if others like James Carr, Pádraig O'Hora and Michael Plunkett could make a county comeback. Former underage star Liam Irwin has also returned home from a spell abroad and played for Breaffy last weekend. Closer to home for Moran, his Ballaghaderreen clubmate Kuba Callaghan scored 1-13 against Claremorris last weekend. Moran, who had previously retired, was actually part of the Ballagh squad for that game. Callaghan was the top scorer in last year's Mayo SFC. But Moran's key move might yet prove to be persuading Tally to commit to the Mayo cause. The Tyrone man is one of the most experienced coaches in the country. In 2003, Tally trained the Tyrone footballers under Mickey Harte when they made history by winning the county's breakthrough All-Ireland. He later coached the Down footballers under James McCartan when they surprised most pundits by progressing all the way to the 2010 All-Ireland final. He managed St Mary's University of Belfast to a famous Sigerson Cup triumph in 2017 and subsequently joined Kevin Walsh's Galway management team for 2018. He was Down manager from 2019-2021 before Jack O'Connor came calling. Tally was involved with Kerry from 2022-24. He had been included in their management team for 2025 but last November he stepped away to take charge of the Derry footballers. Tally has already been to All-Ireland finals with three different counties – Tyrone, Down and Kerry. A fourth with Mayo – hype or hope? Time will tell. GAA Football All-Ireland Senior Championship Semi-Final, Croke Park, 2021. Mayo manager James Horan celebrates after the game against Dublin with his staff. Photograph: Inpho Mayo managers 1996-2025 Kevin McStay 2023-2025 First SFC game – Connacht quarter-final: Roscommon 2-8 Mayo 0-10. Last SFC game – All-Ireland group stage: Cavan 1-17 Mayo 1-14. *Stephen Rochford stepped in as interim manager for the remainder of the championship after McStay fell ill following the Cavan fixture. Silverware: 1 Division One National Football League title (2023). James Horan 2019-2022 First SFC game – Connacht quarter-final: Mayo 1-22 New York 0-4. Last SFC game – All-Ireland quarter-final: Kerry 1-18 Mayo 0-13. Silverware: 1 Division One National Football League title (2019); 2 Connacht SFCs (2020, 2021). *Mayo and Kildare also shared the Division Two league title in 2021. Stephen Rochford 2016-2018 First SFC game – Connacht quarter-final: Mayo 2-16 London 0-9. Last SFC game – All-Ireland qualifiers: Kildare 0-21 Mayo 0-19. Noel Connelly and Pat Holmes 2015 First SFC game – Connacht semi-final: Mayo 1-15 Galway 2-8. Last SFC game – All-Ireland semi-final replay: Dublin 3-15 Mayo 1-14. Silverware: 1 Connacht SFC (2015). James Horan 2011-2014 First SFC game – Connacht quarter-final: Mayo 0-19 London 2-10 (aet). Last SFC game – All-Ireland semi-final replay: Kerry 3-16 Mayo 3-13 (aet). Silverware: 4 Connacht SFCs (2011, 2012, 2013, 2014). John O'Mahony 2007-2010 First SFC game – Connacht quarter-final: Galway 2-10 Mayo 0-9. Last SFC game – All-Ireland qualifiers: Longford 1-12 Mayo 0-14. Silverware: 1 Connacht SFC (2009). Mickey Moran 2006 First SFC game – Connacht quarter-final: Mayo 1-18 London 0-8. Last SFC game – All-Ireland SFC final: Kerry 4-15 Mayo 3-5. Silverware: 1 Connacht SFC (2006). John Maughan 2003-2005 First SFC game – Connacht semi-final: Mayo 0-14 Sligo 0-11. Last SFC game – All-Ireland quarter-final: Kerry 2-15 Mayo 0-18. Silverware: 1 Connacht SFC (2004). Pat Holmes 2000-2002 First SFC game – Connacht quarter-final: Sligo 1-13 Mayo 1-10. Last SFC game – All-Ireland quarter-final: Cork 0-16 Mayo 1-10. Silverware: 1 Division One National Football League title (2001). John Maughan 1996-1999 First SFC game – Connacht quarter-final: Mayo 1-11 London 1-5. Last SFC game – All-Ireland semi-final: Cork 2-12 Mayo 0-12. Silverware: 3 Connacht SFCs (1996, 1997, 1999).

Beers and cheers as Wrexham's latest Hollywood sequel kicks off
Beers and cheers as Wrexham's latest Hollywood sequel kicks off

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Beers and cheers as Wrexham's latest Hollywood sequel kicks off

Successful Hollywood tales often spawn sequels. But how many are left in the can for Wrexham, the working-class northeast Wales town whose football club is in its fifth season as the subject of a wildly popular Disney+ fly-on-the-wall documentary series? Possibly plenty, judging by the childlike enthusiasm and endearing eccentricity that is on show at the Turf bar at the club's Racecourse ground on Saturday, as the new season kicks off. If anything, the love-in may be strengthening between the town and Wrexham AFC's owners, Deadpool star Ryan Reynolds and It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia actor Rob McElhenney, who have bankrolled the little club's promotion through three divisions to the Championship. This is a club, pub and town now collectively punching above their weight: the local economy is doing better than almost anywhere else in Wales, with a £180 million (€208 million) tourism boom fuelled by global interest in the Welcome to Wrexham Disney+ show. READ MORE Wrexham's wholesome, football-themed story stands out as a nugget of feelgood gold in a Britain dogged by insecurity over its national identity and political crises. But first, to the pub for Saturday's Championship opener away to Southampton. Wrexham's match might be 354km away on the south coast, but the heart of the club is on the sleeves of those watching screens at the Turf, built into a stand at the Racecourse. [ Welcome to Wrexham: the love affair between Hollywood and a football-mad Welsh barracks town Opens in new window ] Kickoff is at 12.30pm. I arrive at the pub by 11.15am to a sea of panicked faces: the Turf is already almost full as harried staff turn away locals and tourists seeking tables. Standing room only. By noon, customers can enter only on a one-in-one-out basis. One of the first faces I recognise is Richie Griffiths, a barman on my last visit in 2023 when the club had just won promotion to the football league. On that occasion, hordes of daytime tourists had drunk out all the Madri. On Saturday, things are heading the same way. Griffiths is off duty this time, however, supping his pint outside. The Turf Bar, Wrexham: Inside is a symphony of soft Welsh accents fused with North American twangs. Photograph: Mark Paul Inside is a symphony of soft Welsh accents fused with North American twangs, an echo of the unlikely transatlantic alliance that has brought the town global recognition. I eke out standing room, wedged against a wall by the bar. Nearby, a US couple have snaffled a table with their young son, who dons a Welsh language Wrecsam bobble hat. On my other shoulder is Dave, a Canadian who works at a mine three hours from Calgary. He has flown in just to sample the vibe for Saturday's match, as well as Tuesday's cup fixture. A kid squeezes past us through the mass of limbs. He wears Welsh rugby underpants over his trousers. The waistband says 'Oddballs'. Customers – locals – harvest empty glasses for the staff. This being a wedged pub on a hot day, the musk of flatulence drifts through our zone. Culprit unknown. 'I can breathe, I can breathe,' jokes a barmaid as the queue for beer thins. Meanwhile, I am struggling. Wrexham go a goal up with a penalty against Southampton. Tourists and locals alike scream and blow kisses at the screens. The fairytale continues, for now. Wrexham fans cheering in the Turf as they score a penalty to go one up on Saturday against Southampton — Mark Paul (@MarkPaulTimes) Later, I take a walk around the town. The economic statistics look good on paper but Wrexham hasn't yet morphed into Utopia. There are wrinkles in the success. The pubs teem, there's a buzz on the streets. But while the tourists buy beer, the number of shuttered retail outlets suggests they don't stay long to buy much else. Hope Street, an awkwardly-named thoroughfare in the centre, is an avenue of vape shops, charity shops, barber shops and shut shops. There is a plot twist back at the Turf. Southampton equalise in the 90th minute. In the 96th minute, they go 2-1 up. Woe descends. There'll be no Championship fairytale for Wrexham today. As the whistle blows, silence fills the Turf ... for all of about three minutes. [ Ryan Manning's late free-kick helps Southampton ruin Wrexham's Championship return Opens in new window ] A mural of Wrexham AFC manager, Phil Parkinson, outside The Turf pub. Photograph: Mark Paul The frivolity, at an incongruous level for 2.30pm, soon intensifies if anything. The result appears to be forgotten. The pub gets busier than it was during the match. A seven-piece band sets up in a corner beneath one of the television screens: three of them, for some reason, are tooting saxophones. The singer, aged maybe in his late 60s, looks one of the youngest of the lot, as they belt out football tunes and ballads in Welsh. Who is that, I ask a local. 'It's Geraint Lövgreen,' comes the reply. 'He is one of the best-known singers in the Welsh language. That's his daughter over there, look ...' His daughter is Mari Lövgreen, a Welsh language television presenter. She sings along as she watches her dad's band. US tourists try to sing along too, but they have no idea what is going on. It's entirely possible that nobody knows what's going on, but none of that seems to matter to anyone. The sun is out. So is the fun. Welcome to the madhouse in Wrexham, the town that won Hollywood's lottery and is still loving every minute.

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