
‘Everyone bar the man in the middle could see it was never a red card' – Sligo boss fumes as Mason Melia fires double
All but out of Europe ahead of the second leg following their 4-1 home defeat to Turkish giants Besiktas, St Pat's got their quest for European qualification next year back on track here.
Stephen Kenny's side remain sixth in the table but there are now just five points separating them from second-placed Bohemians. Back-to-back defeats for Sligo sees them remain in trouble, second bottom of the table.
The chief talking point of a pretty uninspiring first half arrived on 42 minutes when Sligo were left fuming after being reduced to 10 men.
Centre-back McClean, who was having a very solid game, certainly tripped Melia as the teenager tried to skip by him. But despite there being obvious cover there from Sebastian Quirk, referee Damien MacGraith incensed Sligo by brandishing a straight red card to McClean for what he deemed a last-man challenge. It was a call that left Sligo manager John Russell flabbergasted.
'I think everyone in the ground, bar the man in the middle, could see it was never a red card. There was a covering defender,' he said. 'That changes the game, there is no doubt about it. It ruined it. It's very frustrating, we've come up here to try and get a result.
'We are fighting for our lives and it has changed the game, and we have ended up coming down the road with a 3-0 defeat.'
Having successfully done so in regard to Sam Sargeant recently, Sligo will appeal the decision.
Russell said: 'Yes, we have to. Thankfully we did get one overturned last week. But it's hard as a manager because you don't want to be complaining all the time about decisions.
'You want the game to be played in the right manner, and we want to play the right way and Pat's want to play the right way. But the game was spoiled by the decision.'
Sam Sargeant rescued Sligo from Jake Mulraney's resultant free-kick with a stunning save, tipping the effort onto the crossbar. But a mistake by the goalkeeper would gift St Pat's the lead four minutes after the restart.
Sargeant misjudged Chris Forrester's ball over the top allowing Mulraney to nip in to walk the ball to the net as the keeper collided with his captain Will Fitzgerald.
Sligo were then at sixes-and-sevens as they somehow survived conceding a second goal on the double on 55. First Sargeant saved well from Melia who had nicked the ball a little too easily off Seán Stewart.
Simon Power looked set to score from the rebound but for a terrific goal-line clearance by Ollie Denham.
But there was no such reprieve a minute later when St Pat's did extend their lead with another soft goal.
Brandon Kavanagh's floated corner was met by the totally unmarked Melia who found the bottom corner with a downward header.
Melia then showed his brilliance with a real poacher's goal on the hour. Sligo lost the ball cheaply with Kavanagh threading it through with the young striker accelerating past Denham, before nonchalantly rolling the ball with his studd by Sargeant before side-footing to the net for his ninth league goal of the season.
St Patrick's Athletic: Anang; Sjoberg, Redmond, Turner, McClelland; Lennon (Baggley, ht), Forrester (Robinson, 79); Mulraney (Leavy, 79), Kavanagh, Power (Garrick, 71); Melia (Carty, 71).
Sligo Rovers: Sargeant; Quirk, Denham, McClean, Stewart; Harkin (Wolfe, 65), McManus; Fitzgerald, Elding (Manning, 80), O'Kane; Waweru (Kavanagh, ht).

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


The Irish Sun
an hour ago
- The Irish Sun
What TV channel is Besiktas vs St Patrick's Athletic on? Stream, kick-off time and odds as Saints chase miracle
The odds reflect how the Dublin outfit are facing into a Mission Impossible scenario STRUGGLING SAINTS What TV channel is Besiktas vs St Patrick's Athletic on? Stream, kick-off time and odds as Saints chase miracle ST PATRICK'S ATHLETIC will look to restore some pride in the second leg of their Europa Conference League third-round qualifier. The Saints were 4-0 by half-time of last week's home leg before salvaging things slightly with the full-time result being 4-1. Here's everything you need to know around how to catch tonight's encounter: WHAT STREAM IS BESIKTAS VS ST PATRICK'S ATHLETIC ON? Frustratingly, it doesn't seem to be available to watch anywhere either on television or through a streaming website. Tonight's LOITV offering is understandably from Tallaght Stadium as Shamrock Rovers' tie with Ballkani is far more up for grabs. And even the usual reliable of SolidSport doesn't appear to have it listed among tonight's offerings. Kick-off from the Turkish giants' stadium in Istanbul will be at 7pm Irish time. WHAT ARE THE ODDS? Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's men are 1/14 to win on the night while Stephen's Kenny side are rank outsiders at 15/1. The two teams to finish level after 90 minutes is priced at 8/1. WHAT'S BEEN SAID IN THE BUILD-UP? Barry Baggley knows the tie may be beyond the Saints — but tonight's game is not. He acknowledged that winning by three goals to force extra-time is not likely and knows all the Saints can do is try and get a result. The midfielder said: 'We spoke about it on Tuesday night. We said we want to get a good result, no matter what the overall outcome is. 'I don't think he understood football' - Wayne Rooney hits back at 'unfair' Tom Brady comments questioning work ethic "If we're being honest, I don't think anyone thinks we're going to score three goals away to Besiktas. 'We're going to go out and try and win the game. We are going to go there and not let them have it their own way. 'Stop them from scoring any more goals and see if we can catch them on the counter-attack.' But he knows doing that against this side — who are under pressure having been beaten by Shakhtar Donetsk in the Europa League — will be tough. 1 Stephen Kenny's charges couldn't cope with the likes of Tammy Abraham who bagged a hat-trick Belfast lad Baggley continued: 'They were a step above what we've played. We knew it was going to be a tough game and that's what happened. 'I have played against France and Spain internationally with the Northern Ireland Under-21s but they are right up there as the best I have played against. 'When you go up that level, the touch is quicker, the physicality, they are just bigger and stronger and faster than what we are used to. 'That's what makes them such good players and that's why they are at this level.'

The 42
2 hours ago
- The 42
All on the line for Shamrock Rovers with European history still in sight
OF THE 36 teams that took part in the league phase of last season's Uefa Conference League, Shamrock Rovers were just outside the top 20 in terms of earnings. Stephen Bradley's side placed 21st on the prize money table after they collected €7.2 million. A combination of performance related bonuses for reaching the knockout stages – winning three times and drawing twice – and their share of TV market distribution meant the Hoops' earning power increased. Rovers lost just one of those six league phase games, coming during the final round before Christmas when eventual winners Chelsea showed their class with a comfortable 5-1 victory at Stamford Bridge. For what it's worth, the Premier League champions also topped the money list with €21.81m, a little over €4m more than Real Betis who they beat in the final and well clear of Fiorentina in third on €14.33m. Chelsea – the newly crowned Club World Cup champions – will play in the Champions League after finishing fourth last season and that means they'll earn just over €18.6m just for taking part. With €2.1m for a win and €700,000 for a draw it highlights the growing disparity between the game's elite and those beginning to thrive in Uefa's lower tiers. No League of Ireland side has managed to reach the league/group phase of European competition without the benefit of the champions' path. Like Shelbourne this year, provided you win that first Champions League qualifying round you will be guaranteed safety nets in the Europa and Conference Leagues. This time around Rovers and Bradley are looking to make history by keeping their dream alive and progressing through the old-school one and done knockout format. The same cannot be said for St Patrick's Athletic in their game after losing 4-1 to Besiktas in Dublin last week. They need their own miracle of Istanbul tonight. Advertisement 𝗞𝗘𝗡𝗡𝗬: '𝗪𝗲 𝘄𝗮𝗻𝘁 𝘁𝗼 𝗱𝗼 𝗼𝘂𝗿𝘀𝗲𝗹𝘃𝗲𝘀 𝗷𝘂𝘀𝘁𝗶𝗰𝗲 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗽𝘂𝘁 𝗶𝗻 𝗮 𝗵𝗶𝗴𝗵 𝗹𝗲𝘃𝗲𝗹 𝗽𝗲𝗿𝗳𝗼𝗿𝗺𝗮𝗻𝗰𝗲' — St Patrick's Athletic FC (@stpatsfc) August 13, 2025 Rovers' challenge is significant but not unsurmountable. They trail Ballkani 1-0 from the first leg in Kosovo last week with Bradley insisting the performance can improve in all departments tonight. 'So much, there was so much we can do better. They played how we felt they would play, they pressed how we felt they would press,' he said. 'The pitch was the biggest, I'm nearly sure the biggest pitch we've played on. So the spaces were there, we just didn't recognise them. For a number of different reasons. 'I don't need to lecture the players we spoke with after. I think they know, from speaking to them as a group and individuals, they know that we were off our levels. It's up to us as a staff to understand why that happened. But we know we can't perform like we did last week and expect to win the game. 'I think that's quite clear. There were loads of little things, I can't say too much before the game but there were lots of little things that we were off it. And when you combine all those little things it adds up to the performance that we delivered.' If they are able to produce a repeat of the come-from-behind win over Celje from last season than it will almost certainly be Portuguese outfit Santa Clara waiting for them in the play-off round. They hold a 3-0 lead over Larne going into the home clash and, barring a famous comeback, will be primed for their chance at Europe's third-tier competition. Bradley confirmed yesterday that playmaker Jack Byrne was not injured but had been deregistered ahead of the tie. The 42 reported yesterday of a fallout in the Rovers' camp, but the Rovers boss reiterated the sense of perspective within his squad that comes from the experience they have build up over close to a decade under his control. Should Rovers progress to the league phase they will become the first Irish club to do so in back-to-back years and it will be the third time in four seasons. Bradley stressed the need for patience in Tallaght Stadium, wary of a side that can cause trouble on the counter attack. 'It won't be…it's not going to be going home, 90 minutes, just hoping for the best. That's not football. You've got to respect that they've got good players, good individuals. I think we've seen that last week. You've got to respect that. 'But then when you have your moments, you've got to go and capitalise and be better. It's not going to be just all out attack for 90 minutes. You do that in Europe and eventually you get punished. It's about when the moments are right, we go and do what we do and go and cause some problems.' There is confidence, too, due to the return to fitness of Graham Burke, a gifted technician in the mould of Byrne who can help swing things in Rovers' favour. 'Big occasions, big grounds, big crowds, pressure. Graham loves it, that's when he comes alive. And I think that's always been him. That's always been part of Graham's beauty, that he tries in them arenas and them situations. Nights like [tonight] are places where Graham wants to be and when you're like he was this year, him, Matt [Healy], [Dawson] Devoy, they've been really, really good. His form is in a really good place. He'll play a big part in that. 'People think his bravery is someone who goes and makes tackles or runs around and kicks people and gets a cheer oof the fans and people say that's bravery. I've always looked at the likes of Graham and thought that's the ultimate act of bravery when you want to receive the ball under pressure when your team aren't maybe playing so well and you take the ball and make it happen. 'For me, that's the ultimate form of bravery on the football pitch. It's receiving and taking the ball and having the courage to go and take the game and make the game and he does that. And like I said, the bigger the occasion, the more he grows into it.' For all the millions up for grabs, that kind of personality is worth its weight in gold as Rovers search for a European turnaround.


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
St Patrick's Athletic ace issues rallying cry for second leg while admitting Besiktas tie is likely beyond them
TIE TOTAL St Patrick's Athletic ace issues rallying cry for second leg while admitting Besiktas tie is likely beyond them BARRY BAGGLEY knows the tie may be beyond St Patrick's Athletic — but tonight's game against Besiktas is not. The Saints are in Istanbul to face the Turkish giants trailing 4-1 from last week's home leg at Tallaght Stadium. Baggley acknowledged that winning by three goals to force extra-time is not likely and knows all the Saints can do is try and get a result. The midfielder said: 'We spoke about it on Tuesday night. We said we want to get a good result, no matter what the overall outcome is. "If we're being honest, I don't think anyone thinks we're going to score three goals away to Besiktas. 'We're going to go out and try and win the game. We are going to go there and not let them have it their own way. 'Stop them from scoring any more goals and see if we can catch them on the counter-attack.' But he knows doing that against Ole Gunnar Solskjaer's side — who are under pressure having been beaten by Shakhtar Donetsk in the Europa League — will be tough. Belfast lad Baggley continued: 'They were a step above what we've played. We knew it was going to be a tough game and that's what happened. 'I have played against France and Spain internationally with the Northern Ireland Under-21s but they are right up there as the best I have played against. 'When you go up that level, the touch is quicker, the physicality, they are just bigger and stronger and faster than what we are used to. 'That's what makes them such good players and that's why they are at this level.' Chelsea legend John Terry gives up dream of becoming a manager The Saints recovered from a horror first half last week when they conceded four goals by holding the Turks scoreless in the second half. And they pulled a goal back through winger Simon Power. Baggley believes that shows what can be achieved and added: 'As you saw in the second half, we defended well, have pace up top and can score. 'We'll go in with a good attitude. We're going to try and keep it a lot tighter and make it difficult for them. 'Hopefully we'll get a few chances ourselves.'