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Ireland 0 Luxembourg 0: How the Irish players rated

Ireland 0 Luxembourg 0: How the Irish players rated

Irish Times4 days ago

16: Max O'Leary (Bristol City)
Needed a second chance to get hold of a cross in the 13th minute but just before the half-hour mark O'Leary made an impressive diving save high to his left to deny a goal-bound Sinani shot. Used his feet to block a near-post effort in the second half. A solid international debut.
Rating:
7
5: Jake O'Brien (Everton)
Suffered a bang to his head late on in what was an otherwise largely uneventful game for O'Brien. He tried to get up the field when Ireland were in possession but so much about this encounter felt like an end of season affair.
Rating:
6
22: Nathan Collins (Brentford)
Captained Ireland on the night and despite some scrappy defending by the team at times, they finished with a clean sheet. Collins went close to scoring with a first-half header but his effort hit the woodwork.
Rating:
6
4: Dara O'Shea (Ipswich Town)
Showed good positioning and decision-making when heading Smallbone's free back across the face of the goal for Ireland's best goalscoring chance in the first half – only for Collins to be denied by the woodwork.
Rating:
6
READ MORE
11: Robbie Brady (Preston North End)
He was forced off injured after just 20 minutes, a disappointing end to what was a positive season for Brady in green. Brady pulled a free short from a decent crossing position early on.
Rating:
4
17: Kasey McAteer (Leicester City)
Showed good endeavour early in the second half to get on the end of a goalscoring opportunity but his left-footed shot bounced wide of the right post. Was full of workrate and ambition throughout, though his finishing wasn't on point.
Rating:
6
8: Jason Knight (Bristol City)
He got back well to put his body in the way and make an important block on a close-range shot from Jans in the opening stages of the second half, the Luxembourg captain's shot hitting Knight and ricocheting out for a corner. Worked hard all night to try energise Ireland.
Rating:
6
Ireland's Killian Phillips and Jason Knight. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
24: Killian Phillips (St Mirren, on loan from Crystal Palace)
It has been a very encouraging few days for Phillips, who built on his first Ireland appearance in the draw with Senegal by earning his maiden start in this game. But like most of his team-mates, struggled to make an impact in a low-tempo contest.
Rating:
5
6: Will Smallbone (Southampton)
The Southampton midfielder whipped in a lovely weighted pass from a free late in the first half and it created Ireland's best scoring chance in the opening period, O'Shea nodding the ball back across the face of the goal where Collins headed against the woodwork.
Rating:
6
9: Evan Ferguson (West Ham United, on loan from Brighton)
He struggled to carry any real attacking threat in what was a lacklustre fixture. The Meath man was booked for a foul on Carlson, which prevented a Luxembourg breakaway midway through the second half. Ferguson was taken off with 15 minutes to go.
Rating:
5
7: Troy Parrott (AZ Alkmaar)
The Dubliner had something of a running battle with Korac and won two frees early on after the Luxembourg defender was forced to drag him down. Battled well and produced a lovely dinked finish for a goal that was correctly ruled offside in the 66th minute.
Rating:
7
Subs:
Ryan Manning (Southampton); Jack Taylor (Ipswich Town); Festy Ebosele (Istanbul Basaksehir); Adam Idah (Celtic); Matt Doherty (Wolves); John Patrick (Stade De Reims)
Manning was busy and made a very positive impact after his introduction. Ebosele and Taylor combined to create a good goalscoring chance soon after they came off the bench. Taylor also smacked the crossbar with a rasping shot late on. Doherty made an important late interception.
Rating:
7
Manager: Heimir Hallgrímsson
On what was his 58th birthday, Hallgrímsson was at least able to celebrate Ireland getting through this international window unbeaten. This match will not last long in the memory but over the course of the two games he did at least get to have a look at some new players in green.
Rating:
6

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Sick of the sight of each other: the Armagh v Galway rivalry of the roaring '20s and before
Sick of the sight of each other: the Armagh v Galway rivalry of the roaring '20s and before

The 42

time3 hours ago

  • The 42

Sick of the sight of each other: the Armagh v Galway rivalry of the roaring '20s and before

PRIOR TO 2001, Armagh and Galway had never crossed paths in championship football. And yet, the seven meetings they have since has packed in enough controversy, intrigue and high-wire action to be considered one of the greatest rivalries of this century. Here, we take a look at the moments that have defined that rivalry. 2001 Round 3 qualifier, Galway 0-13 Armagh 0-12 In the very first meeting between these counties, held in Croke Park, there were teething troubles for the new backdoor system and GAA infrastructure. Armagh had won the previous two Ulster titles, but had been dethroned this time by Tyrone. After accounting for Monaghan and Down in the backdoor, they felt good about themselves. Falling behind by seven points – a Garda escort that never arrived, along with having to change in a cramped Cusack Stand dressing room had Armagh in a panic, they staged a revival and were seeking an equaliser when Justin McNulty looked up the field to deliver a pass. It was blocked down by the big hands of Michael Donnellan. He then took off on a typical skating run, sending Paul McGrane to the floor with a swivel of the hips before setting up substitute Paul Clancy to kick the winner. Pádraig Joyce evades Armagh's Enda McNulty. INPHO INPHO Galway ended up with Sam Maguire, Joyce kicking ten points in the final. Armagh immediately went about changing the management from the two Brians of Canavan and McAlinden to Big Joe. Sam would winter in Armagh the following year. 2013 Round 3 qualifier, Galway 0-13 Armagh 0-12 An oddly bloodless encounter, but nonetheless scored as a major upset at the time because of the formlines. Galway had taken a tanking from Mayo in Connacht and struggled through tests against Tipperary and Waterford. But a 24th minute goal from Danny Cummins set them on their way. As a matter of interest, Paul Conroy of Galway, along with Armagh's Mark Shields, Aidan Forker, Stefan Campbell, Ethan Rafferty and James Morgan are still trucking along, all these years later. 2015 Round 2 qualifier, Armagh 0-12 Galway 1-12 The 12th of July has been the source of much joy and triumphalism for Orangemen in the north, but not in the Athletic Grounds in 2015. Damien Comer punches a goal. Presseye / Declan Roughan/INPHO Presseye / Declan Roughan/INPHO / Declan Roughan/INPHO Galway secured their first away win in the qualifiers since 2001, 1-12 to 0-12 Advertisement The decisive blow came when David Gough advanced a Galway free – much too far for McGeeney's liking. Paul Conroy took the free but it dropped short and who was there to punch to the net, only Damien Comer. 2022 All-Ireland quarter final, Galway 2-21 Armagh 3-18 (aet, Galway 4-1 penalties) Well, now. After Armagh launched an incredible comeback in normal time, capped by a sensational Rian O'Neill equaliser, the two teams were set for extra-time. Coming off the pitch, Aidan Forker and Damien Comer had words and the situation flared up instantly and desperately. The low point was reached when Tiernan Kelly – injured and not on the matchday squad, appeared to make an apparent eye gouge with Comer. James Crombie / INPHO James Crombie / INPHO / INPHO 'I think they are scenes we cannot hide behind,' said Oisín McConville on the RTÉ analysis. 'People talk about unsavoury… It's not – it's disgusting.' Pat Spillane then said, 'That was disgraceful, scandalous and shame on all involved.' Both counties were later fined €10,000 for their actions, with Kelly receiving a 24-week ban. Armagh's experience of penalty shootouts is grisly and dreadful, but they must have felt this loss especially keenly. Level at the end of extra-time, Galway won 4-1 on penalties. 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Kildare hurlers: The long and winding road to make it back to the Liam MacCarthy
Kildare hurlers: The long and winding road to make it back to the Liam MacCarthy

Irish Daily Mirror

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Kildare hurlers: The long and winding road to make it back to the Liam MacCarthy

The Kildare hurlers were so close they could feel it. It was 49 years ago yesterday when the Lilywhites got ahead of Wexford in the Leinster SHC semi-final, only to fall by four points thanks to the Model County's late surge. Wexford went on to lift the Liam MacCarthy Cup. Pat Dunney was at the heart of it for Kildare in Athy that day. "I remember with 10 minutes to go we were very close to winning," said the Raheens great. "Then they got a couple of scores and just held on and won - probably because you weren't in that position before, I suppose. "They were used to playing at a different level. The effort that we put in to be that close, we just couldn't sustain it for the full length of the game. "As he was for the county in the previous decade and has been since his playing days ended thanks to the work he has done in administrative roles to foster the sport in the county." 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"That's what happened in the 70s and the success Kildare are having now, hopefully that continues to grow the game and ensures we have the players - and the coaches - coming through. It's all about the numbers. You need the numbers involved." Kildare returned to the extended Leinster championship from 2001 for four years, but only beat Wicklow in that period. Dunney - who went on to be a selector during Mick O'Dwyer's time with the Lilywhites - was the chairman of Croke Park's hurling development committee when, in 2004, the Christy Ring and Rackard Cups were announced. Kildare have been slowly building blocks since then. Naas' move into the competitive underage ranks in Kilkenny was massive, as has been the club's progress in the Leinster club championship - and the appointment of David Herity as the Lilywhitsenior manager, and more recently Brian Dowley. Colm Nolan, the current county hurling chairman, came on board in 2014. Four years later he headed up an action plan to drive participation in non-traditional hurling areas - over 50 'action agents' were appointed to go to work. "We knew if they could get behind it that their passion, their determination locally would drive others on," said Nolan. The Lilywhites have won the Christy Ring six times, including last year, but the Joe McDonagh Cup became the next level competition to win from 2018 and Kildare's victory over Laois in last Saturday's Croker final has propelled them into the promised land of this All-Ireland SHC preliminary quarter-final and then Division 1B in 2026. The average age of the Kildare hurlers is just over 23. "This is the culmination of what we put in place 15 or 20 years ago at underage level," said Dunney. "I remember those young lads from when they were 12 or 14 playing, so it's terrific. "It's a people-driven thing. It's not about a thing you can put up on a blackboard and say, 'this is what we do'. 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Shamrock Rovers versus Shelbourne transpires to be something more – what we learned from Friday's League of Ireland fixtures
Shamrock Rovers versus Shelbourne transpires to be something more – what we learned from Friday's League of Ireland fixtures

Irish Times

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Shamrock Rovers versus Shelbourne transpires to be something more – what we learned from Friday's League of Ireland fixtures

The highs and lows of Josh Honohan All sorts of narratives loomed over this Dublin derby; a pairing of champions versus league leaders, Damien Duff versus Stephen Bradley and, as it transpired, Josh Honohan versus himself . Contrary to League of Ireland norms , both of these sides love having possession of the football. Shelbourne have controlled games, albeit without threatening enough, plenty of times this season, but they were reduced to sloppy passes and hopeful crosses for much of Friday night. Duff reckoned this was the first time in four years that he was afforded the luxury of a fully fit squad. Paddy Barrett back healthy and Mark Coyle back in midfield were causes for optimism, but very little quality from the home side transpired. Shelbourne's goal, a header from Honohan steered into the corner of his own net, looked to be a catalyst but ultimately marked a temporary moment of reprieve. For Shamrock Rovers , every game is another reason to talk up their title aspirations. Jack Byrne's quality from set pieces again reared its decisive head – an early free kick landing right on Daniel Cleary's head for the opener. Shels worked hard to limit Byrne from open play but failed to stifle his team-mates in the middle, with Matthew Healy looking particularly commanding. READ MORE Honohan, after a week in which he fell short of an anticipated Ireland debut, was desperate to atone for his uncharacteristic error. With seven minutes to go, Seán Gannon failed to deal with Aaron Greene's driven cross. It broke to Rovers' star wing back, who lashed the ball high into the net. Having delivered the winner, Honohan folded his arms in satisfaction à la Kylian Mbappé , before quickly raising them in apology as he was mobbed by team-mates. Twelve points now separate these two sides – a seemingly insurmountable gap, even at this stage. Bohemians find their identity In the early parts of the season, Bohemians looked devoid of identity. Alan Reynolds, under huge pressure, made flurries of changes every week, unsuccessful in his attempts to strengthen a weak spine and sharpen a blunt attack. That has all changed. Reynolds still rotates, but the tweaks are seamless. Whether it is Colm Whelan or James Clarke leading the line, the plan is clear and well executed. It was Clarke on Friday night, makeshift but fluid in that role – not a natural goal scorer but a classy facilitator for those around him. Archie Meekison has been utilised in a number of positions this season, and he looked right at home cutting in from the left wing. After spurning a good opportunity early on, Meekison took the opener very well – latching on to a heavy touch from last man Darragh Crowley and rounding Cork City goalkeeper Tein Troost twice before finding the corner. Dawson Devoy and Ross Tierney are two excellent footballers, and both look well at home now in Reynolds' set-up. They chimed well for the second goal – Devoy twisting and elusive in midfield; Tierney enthusiastic to affect play further forward. The ball eventually fell to the impressive Dayle Rooney to tap-in and all but end the contest. Cork are second from bottom and winless in eight, so in isolation this win shouldn't have Bohs fans getting carried away. Their form since early April though, validates any dreamers. Dizzy now in second place, the Gypsies have a game in hand on Shamrock Rovers that could take them within striking distance of the leaders. Derry lose ground as Galway United steady the ship Galway manager John Caulfield after the game against Derry. Photograph: Lorcan Doherty/Inpho John Caulfield spent the midseason break plotting Galway United's move to a back four but following a more open half of football than many would have expected, the Tribesmen reverted to type. After four damaging defeats on the spin, Galway are now unbeaten in three. 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Another 0-0 for St Pat's and Drogheda Three times St Patrick's Athletic and Drogheda United have met this season, and three times the sides have failed to produce a goal. This particular scoreless draw came close – Luke Dennison denied Mason Melia from the penalty spot after 20 minutes in what was the game's defining moment. The Saints were the better side overall, without doing much to worry Dennison again. Drogheda can be happy with a point after a difficult week for the club, who have been denied access to the Uefa Conference League under the governing body's ownership rules. Though they have taken the case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport , the outlook is not good for last season's FAI Cup winners. If they are looking for positives, this season still has plenty to offer for Drogheda. They remain in third place, unbeaten in five games and sitting narrowly ahead of their Friday night opponents.

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