
Clean sheet and debuts but dull end-of-season fare brings few positives for Ireland in Luxembourg
Today at 17:02
In the last game of the international season before the summer break, Ireland's players played as if they were already on the beaches of Europe with a flat and unflattering display in a scoreless draw with Luxembourg, one that will not live long in the memory.
Options were limited in terms of opponents for Ireland in this June window, hence a friendly at home to an African nation (Senegal) and a tie away to an outfit who looked limited on paper but who appeared more of a threat than a shot-shy Ireland. Luxembourg enjoyed more possession and also more chances in a rather insipid game.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
3 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Nine big questions ahead of a blockbuster weekend of Sam Maguire Series drama
There are eight seismic fixtures taking place in the final round of the Sam Maguire group stages. It also signals the end of this current system. The group phase will be abolished after this year with a new qualifier-style format in place next year. Several intercounty managers have criticised this move, which was voted on at Congress last February. Was it the right call? This is just one of many big questions ahead of a blockbuster weekend. Should we get rid of this format? All-Ireland winning manager Kieran McGeeney is adamant that the GAA made the wrong move. Galway boss Pádraic Joyce and Wicklow's Oisín McConville have said similar. 'It is great this year,' agreed former Mayo manager James Horan on the Irish Examiner's Gaelic football podcast. 'Everything seems to be working right this year, with rules and everything else. It is all combining and working out ok. Should we get rid of it? If you take this year on its own, you would say no but what were we saying this time last year or the year before that? Too many games etc. Overall, the sample size of one year isn't enough to make a decision. Changing it might be the right play.' Next year, the last 16 will play in a Round 1 with provincial finals and league positions still determining placings. They will then be divided into Round 2A and 2B. Armagh manager Kieran McGeeney feels the GAA made the wrong move with the current format. File picture: Ryan Byrne/Inpho The eight Round 1 winners will comprise Round 2A with the victors advancing to the All-Ireland quarter-finals. The losers will meet the winners of the losers' stage in Round 2B to fill the remain four places in the last eight. 'I would get rid of it,' agreed Paul Rouse on the Examiner podcast. 'I think it's worth trying the new one.' How will Cork defend? Roscommon's front six against Meath was frightening. Dylan Ruane, Ciaráin Murtagh, Enda Smith, Diarmuid Murtagh, Daire Cregg and Ben O'Carroll all started and scored. Cork must combat that threat. Enda Smith didn't have a shot in his previous two games against Galway or Kerry but he caught fire in Dr Hyde Park, kicking three two-pointers from four attempts. Ben O'Carroll is their leading assister in championship as well as scoring 1-10 from play. They are the priority. 'Traditionally I was man-on-man everywhere; it evolved over time,' said Horan. Cork will take on Roscommon in Round 3 of the All-Ireland SFC. File picture: Tom Beary/Sportsfile 'I haven't coached with the new rules yet but in games in the past we had very good man-markers to go specific on an influential player for the opposition. But players are so smart now, they go ahead of the ball, get their marker and pull him out past the ball to create little zones for players to run through. 'If I'm centre-half back and Ben O'Carroll is there, running out away from the ball where you know he isn't really a shooting risk even if he gets the play, I am not moving away from the direction of the ball. On those occasions, you let him go and hold strong.' Do Kerry need to chase two-pointers? After a league lacking in orange flags, Kerry kicked seven two-pointers last time out. Plenty of that was due to officiating and two-point frees. From play, they converted three of six attempts. Meath consistently shoot from outside the arc, converting five against Roscommon. Don't expect Kerry to go chasing them, but they will create opportunities for David Clifford and Sean O'Shea. Who is the leading contender for Player of the Year? The current favourite remains David Clifford or his brother, Paudie. Michael Murphy is nearby. That says as much about their All-Ireland ambitions as it does their form. Right now, as we begin to move towards knockout football, who else has impressed? 'Conor Glass for the sheer majesty of his performance against Galway,' said Rouse. Once again, Kingdom talisman David Clifford is one of the hot favourites to be crowned the Player of the Year. File picture: David Fitzgerald/Sportsfile James Horan went for Armagh's Oisin Conaty: 'When did he get to this level? I think he has been absolutely amazing. That left footed point the last day, took the ball running away from goal and ran around a few, that is a serious level this guy is operating at now consistently.' Galway's Matthew Thompson is the current runaway favourite for Young Footballer of the Year. Can a player survive in the new rules without pace? 'They will struggle,' according to Galway boss Joyce. 'That has been the case at intercounty over the last few years. Unless you have pace, you will struggle. Probably more so now. 'You are going away from the traditional positions on the pitch. It is three back, eight workhorses in the middle and three up top. When the ball goes up, you need your wing-backs and wing-forwards coming at pace up the pitch and being able to control the ball at high speed.' Do you need height? In a late blitz, Mayo made widespread late changes. Sean Morahan came in at full-back. Even without Donnacha McHugh, David McBrien was able to operate further out the pitch and let Morahan take Mark Bradley, with Jack Coyne on Darragh Canavan and Enda Hession on Darren McCurry. Cathal McShane's departure has left Tyrone struggling for height in attack. File picture: Ramsey Cardy/Sportsfile Tyrone's lack of height inside made it easier to defend against them. The news last month that Cathal McShane had stepped away from the panel has left a void. Can Clare throw a spanner in the works? Eight games without a win. Clare's history in this version of the All-Ireland SFC is not good. However, they now face Leinster champions Louth, who lost their last two since a historic outing in Croke Park. Are Down the kickout innovators? Ronan Burns has been in sensational form for Down. He made two point blank saves from Daire Ó Baoill and Aaron Doherty against Donegal. The 20-year-old has remarkable variety with his kickouts, getting a whole host of them off short despite the new limitation on the ball having to travel outside the arc. 'They are getting away a high percentage of kickouts for sure but the way I look at it, the press that was put on for some of those was watery at best,' said Horan. 'It would spur you on as an opposition. Maybe set a trap, let them have a few and go in for the smash. The kickouts, I don't think that much has happened yet. It is bog standard, an overload here and a run there. We are at the early stages.' Can Mayo get after Donegal in the middle? Colm Reape went long with every kickout against Tyrone. Donegal have shown a huge reliance on Michael Murphy for restarts and Shaun Patton's fitness is a live concern. Personnel will dictate so much on Sunday. Patton, Jason McGee, Donnacha McHugh and Diarmuid O'Connor are required for their respective teams.


Irish Examiner
3 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Delaney and Laois eager to pick up pieces and go again
For Laois and Padraig Delaney, this is a bid to bounce back. The quick turnaround from the devastation of the Joe McDonagh Cup final defeat to a preliminary quarter-final may be a 'joke', but the challenge is deadly serious. Manager Tommy Fitzgerald was critical of the six-day gap when speaking in Croke Park after their loss to Kildare, while stressing they want to represent the jersey properly. For Delaney, that is the primary ambition in welcoming Tipperary this weekend. "It can be tricky. It's a quick turnaround, especially after losing,' he said, speaking at the launch of the All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship this week. 'It can be a lot easier after a win and you have momentum behind you. But at the end of the day, it's a Championship game and you're putting on the Laois jersey. You want to do yourself proud as well. We don't get too many years to do it so it's another Championship game where we'd like to put in a good performance." Laois looked primed for a promotion push in 2025. They reached the 2024 decider, Delaney made the Team of the Year, the county board made a shrewd appointment in Darren Gleeson last August. Gleeson subsequently had to step down in order to undergo cancer treatment. 'Tommy came in at late notice, but he brought in a savage backroom team as well. Tommy is one of our own. He's a brilliant manager. 'We couldn't have asked for anyone better in that situation. What happened to Darren Gleeson was unfortunate. We would have loved to have him down. But we couldn't have asked for a better man than Tommy.' Despite delegates voting against a proposal to abolish the preliminary quarter-finals in 2023, there have been renewed calls to scrap the system. Laois secured a shock win in 2019 but since then there have been numerous one-sided games. That move could create space to stretch out the Joe McDonagh Cup and play the final before one of the All-Ireland semi-finals, with the victors still progressing to the Leinster championship the following year. When asked whether he'd favour such a move, Delaney was reflective. 'I suppose. But it's nice to get the opportunity to play the top teams as well. Back in 2019 we beat Dublin so there is scope there to win games and have a real cut off bigger teams. It's definitely a lot easier when you win the final but we'll pick ourselves back up again and go again on Saturday."


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
Chrissy McKaigue says reports of Derry's demise have been greatly exaggerated
Chrissy McKaigue considers the portrayal of Derry's winless season, and feels it is too rudimentary to judge everything solely on the results. Because Derry are back in Newry this Saturday, and they might just be back in business too. The last time the Oak Leafers won a competitive match in regulation time was their All-Ireland SFC round three group game against Westmeath at Páirc Esler in Newry on June 15th, 2024. They subsequently beat Mayo after a penalty shootout in a preliminary quarter-final before losing to Kerry in the last eight. McKaigue played in all three of those games – scoring the crucial equalising point at the end of normal time in Castlebar – but in November the 2022 All-Star defender announced his intercounty retirement. 'I've settled in relatively well and that's probably a good thing, because when your gut tells you that it's time to move on and several months down the line it still feels that way, that's a fairly good indication that the time was right,' he says. READ MORE 'From around May onwards, every time I was coming out of the Owenbeg changing rooms I was going, 'This is one less visit that I'm going to have in the years to come'. Time moves on quickly and you realise that everyone's replaceable.' Haste wasn't Derry GAA's strong point last autumn, and they were the last county to appoint a senior football manager for 2025, with Paddy Tally confirmed as boss in mid-November. It has been a difficult maiden season for Tally, but their recent draw with Galway in the second round of group games felt like a statement performance. The aim now is to add a statement win against Dublin in Newry on Saturday. McKaigue does not agree with the view that Derry's footballers have been spiralling since the end of last year's league campaign. ' It depends on your definition of dropping off the edge of a cliff,' he replies when asked about Derry's 12-month slump. ' We won the Division One National League title, which is no mean feat. Now, is it that Derry failed in terms of meeting their expectations in the championship? Absolutely, but there has been a narrative created last year that Derry's senior footballers had the worst season ever. 'They won the McKenna Cup, I'm not claiming it to be anything overly special – but they still won it. They won Division One of the National League, they didn't have a good championship campaign, but it's all relative because they were beaten by Donegal, Armagh, Galway and eventually Kerry – three out of the four teams that reached the All-Ireland semi-finals. Derry still reached the quarter-finals. 'I can remember many poorer years for Derry in the championship than last year, but it was sort of built up into this catastrophe of a year. It was more that we didn't meet expectations. 'It's amazing that narrative was sort of depicted in so many areas, and I felt Mickey Harte last year got a lot of scrutiny that was a wee bit over the top at times. 'I still feel that Derry are a contender for Sam Maguire, maybe not this year in the same capacity as last year, but do I feel that Derry squad will have the potential to be a contender for Sam Maguire in the next number of years? I do. 'I know that's the ambition for Derry as a county. I'd like to think that wouldn't be based upon delusion, that would be based upon fact and logic. In the last three years, back-to-back semi-finals and last year quarter-finals, so you'd like to think there's a wee bit of substance in that claim. 'This year hasn't gone very well, but there have been legitimate reasons for that.' And as for Derry's winless streak, McKaigue believes there are various ways to juggle those stats. 'Winning on penalties counts as a victory, we went down to Mayo and beat them,' he says. 'Just to make sure you're writing that now, because I don't buy into that narrative. Winning on penalties still works. 'By the time Derry play Dublin next weekend, they'll have played 11 competitive games this year, and each of the 11 games will have been played against Division One standard teams. So it's all relative too, the standard of opposition they have played against this year has been of a really high standard. 'You have to give Paddy Tally a bit of slack too, in regards that we're missing Conor McCluskey and Gareth McKinless. From a Derry perspective, they are two generational players.' Still, unless they get something from their clash with Dublin on Saturday, Derry's 2025 season will be over. 'You would imagine Dublin's efficiency will be better than (it was against Armagh),' says McKaigue. 'But you're going to Newry, you're going to a tighter pitch, you're going to a proper championship game where it literally is winner takes all. 'Are Derry capable of beating Dublin? Absolutely, but Dublin are also capable of beating Derry. People aren't quite sure where Derry and Dublin both are in the pecking order, so you would like to think after the next game there will be a bit more transparency shed on that one. 'I just think Dublin will have a big say in this year's All-Ireland, potentially. I hope they don't, because that will mean that Derry will have turned them over. 'They're a different side without Con O'Callaghan, too. He is their David Clifford. He is their leader. He does so much for them and gives them that composure and that settled feeling .' Chrissy McKaigue was speaking at the launch of the 2025 Electric Ireland GAA All-Ireland minor championships