logo
Shels boss wants wounded players to force Euro reaction - 'You turn that hurt into hunting'

Shels boss wants wounded players to force Euro reaction - 'You turn that hurt into hunting'

The 424 days ago
JOEY O'BRIEN WANTS his wounded Shelbourne players go on one final European hunt to ensure qualification for the league phase of the Uefa Conference League.
The Reds saw Croatia champions Riejka wipe out their 2-1 lead from the first leg last week before an absorbing ending at Tolka Park led to their exit from the third qualifying round of the Europa League.
Mipo Odubeko converted an 86th-minute penalty to level the tie at 3-3 before Milan Mbeng came close to win it moments later, only to see the man who conceded the penalty – Ante Orec – go down the other end and produce a clever reverse strike to send Rijeka into the Europa League play-off in the last minute of normal time.
The winner of Icelandic side Vikingur and Linfield, who Shels beat in the first qualifying round of the Champions League, now await in the Conference League play-off.
Advertisement
O'Brien confirmed he will travel to Belfast on Thursday to see if David Healy's side can overturn a 2-1 deficit and set up an All-Ireland rematch for the prize of league phase European football and a minimum of €3.8 million.
'I thought we were probably the better team in the second half. Looked fitter, looked stronger towards the end of it,' O'Brien said.
'The second goal they score, it's an unbelievable shot, an unbelievable goal. But again, lads stuck at it, immensely proud of them, how they kept going. Obviously, we got the penalty then, late doors, and here, we were ready for the barnstorming finish.
'We had the [Mbeng] chance, we didn't take it, and they went up, got a little bit of luck, I suppose, with a breaking ball, good finish. Yeah, it was a sickener.
'But I said to the lads, like, obviously they (Rijeka) are celebrating and all that, and we want that, you know, and that's it, and you use this hurt now that we're going through as the hunt.
'That's what it is, you turn that hurt into hunting, and that's what we're doing now, we want that celebration in a couple of weeks' time.
'The lads, it's a hard one to take, and bitterly disappointed for the boys, but as you said, we're still in it, and yeah, we need to be on it now for the next one.'
The next one is an attempt at creating history for the club by qualifying for group/league stage of European football for the first time, and also ensuring back-to-back qualification to Uefa's third tier competition for League of Ireland sides after Shamrock Rovers did so last season, eventually reaching the knockout phase.
The Hoops earned €7.26 million in total for their exploits last season but O'Brien isn't looking at the next two-legged tie as any kind of consolation.
'I think I said that before. I trusted the lads, I fancied our lads. As I said, I couldn't be any prouder of them. The effort that they put in over the two legs, the performance that they put in over the two legs.
'We were right there to the death. And here, as I said, when all said and done it comes down to a little bit of luck late doors, we had a chance, didn't take it. And I suppose you can look at all sorts of the parts of the game and all that sort of stuff. That's where it is. We get a chance after it's in the balance. Don't take it. They go up the other end and take theirs.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Grealish adapted and became a Guardiola player. Now can he find himself again?
Grealish adapted and became a Guardiola player. Now can he find himself again?

Irish Examiner

time3 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

Grealish adapted and became a Guardiola player. Now can he find himself again?

A figure toils alone at Bodymoor Heath. The light fades, but against the setting sun his silhouette is distinctive: the floppy hair, the hunched gait, the vast calves. Jack Grealish is working, honing and polishing, inventing, striving at the limits of technical excellence. He has inspired Aston Villa to promotion. He has helped them avoid relegation, establish themselves as a Premier League side. He is enormously popular. Even opposing fans admire his ability, warm to the sense he is still in some way the impish kid in the playground, revelling in his ability, having fun. That summer at the Euros he had become a cause célèbre, the figure behind whom the clamour for Gareth Southgate to release the handbrake rallied, the poster boy for the sort of pundit who wished England would just believe in talent. But Grealish wanted more. He was a Villa fan, loved the club, but he wanted to test himself at the very highest level, to compete for the league title, to play in the later stages of the Champions League. He did not want to be just the cheeky kid with the jinking feet; he had professional ambition. At which there came a flash of light, a puff of smoke, and there appeared on the heath a cadaverous, dark-haired figure – Mephistopheles, or perhaps an agent. Grealish could have all these things, the figure said, he could lift trophies, even win a treble, if only he signed a six-year contract with Manchester City. As Grealish reached for the pen, the figure murmured, almost under his breath, that there would be a cost. But by then the deal was done. Which is how we have come, four years later, to this week, and Grealish, the first £100m signing by a British club, being loaned to Everton. He has won three league titles, a Champions League and an FA Cup; the cadaverous figure has fulfilled his part of the bargain. Yet there lurks a sense that Grealish's move four summers ago has not quite worked out, that though much has been won, much too was lost. Perhaps David Moyes, a common line of thought runs, can help the lost boy rediscover his sense of joy. Looked at coldly, Grealish's career has mapped an almost perfect arc. A kid shows talent, joins his local club, prospers, leaves them for a giant, wins trophies, has one outstanding season, and then, as he approaches 30, he drops down again joining another of England's slumbering giants. How else should a career look? You would probably want that third phase to start two or three years later but that aside, this is pretty much the model. Had he stayed at Villa, there would have been corners of the internet mocking him for his lack of ambition and lack of medals, as happened with Harry Kane before he left Tottenham for Bayern. But Grealish has become entwined with a broader discussion, the doubts about the effectiveness of Pep Guardiola's methods – which itself is a broad spectrum, ranging from kneejerk hostility from instinctive nostalgists who believe simple is always good, to considered analysis that wonders whether an obsessive focus on position and possession can make a side predictable now that the world has become familiar with the basic Guardiola methods. Foremost among that second category is Guardiola himself, a manager who has maintained a state of almost perpetual evolution. That is one of the reasons he signed Grealish: to add imagination and improvisation, just as, a year later, he would sign Erling Haaland, another player who did not obviously fit his system, who might generate the friction that would generate the sparks of creativity. Or at least it appears that was the plan. Haaland resisted, refused his manager's demands to drop deep, to convert himself into a gigantic creative midfielder. Grealish did not. Whatever Guardiola originally intended for him, he soon began to craft Grealish to his philosophy. Amid the celebrations at the end of the 2021-22 season, as City came from 2-0 down to beat Aston Villa and win the title, Grealish, whose candid nature is part of his charm, spoke of how inhibited he at times felt by Guardiola's demands; his dribbles per game had dropped by 40%. The system had, perhaps inevitably, changed him more than he had changed the system. Manchester City's Jack Grealish (left) and Manchester City's Erling Haaland speak during training session at the City Football Academy, Manchester. Picture: Peter Byrne/PA Wire. The following season was Grealish's best at City. He won the treble. He scored five goals in the league and set up another seven. Guardiola trusted him in the biggest games; he started every knockout game in the Champions League. Teammates nicknamed him the Rest Station because you could give him the ball and take a couple of seconds breather, knowing he was not going to give it away. His dribbles per game rose by 7%. Grealish adapted. He became a Guardiola player. But the next season he started only 10 Premier League games. The one after that, last season, he started seven. Dribbles per game dropped by 56%. When City were chasing a goal in the FA Cup final against Crystal Palace, Guardiola preferred to turn to Claudio Echeverri, a 19-year-old Argentinian who had never played for the club. And with that it was over. Injuries have not helped, but neither has his lifestyle – and Guardiola implied a link after Grealish suffered a recurrence of a groin injury in February last year. Very few modern footballers have been pictured quite so often in the company of alcohol. That is not to say Grealish has led a life of hedonism, or even of a footballer of 30 years ago, but neither is he one of the 'obedient little schoolboys' – to use Zlatan Ibrahimovic's term – favoured by Guardiola. Whether that is how he has always lived or whether he lost some hunger after winning the treble, only Grealish can know. Perhaps he could tolerate the restrictions only so long. But he is still young. If he can remain injury-free, there could be a glorious third act to his career, perhaps even a trophy at a club that would really appreciate it. And if he could rediscover that sense of joy while doing so, if he can make the Faustian deal a temporary contract, what a career that would be, beginning and ending as a popular schoolyard player, with a curious trophy-winning interlude in the middle. Guardian

New Match of the Day hosts set out plans for new era after Gary Lineker exit
New Match of the Day hosts set out plans for new era after Gary Lineker exit

Irish Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

New Match of the Day hosts set out plans for new era after Gary Lineker exit

We're a third of the way into BBC Sport's Match of the Day panel before any of the new hosts even mention Gary Lineker, and it's merely a fleeting reference. This season sees Gabby Logan, Kelly Cates and Mark Chapman taking over presenting duties following Lineker's highly publicised departure. Speaking at the Beeb's season launch event in London, they're all set to look ahead while honouring what has made the show a hit. "It's a team effort," asserts Chapman. "All three of us have agreed it's not going to be about us - which might not be what the bosses want to hear. (Image: PA) "We've all worked in sport and it's about the pundits first and foremost, getting the best out of the pundits, and that's the most important thing for us. But this, for me, is a show that is thriving. It's a show that we hope to continue doing what's been done so far." All three hosts are coming at the project with different experiences, with Chapman a regular in the format after regularly hosting Match of the Day 2 in recent seasons (the Sunday show will drop the '2' this term, bringing it on level footing with the Saturday programme and midweek Champions League coverage). Cates' experience is more in the live football realm through her Sky Sports work, while Logan - who anchored The BBC's coverage of the Euro 2025 final as well as stepping in on MOTD in the past - is somewhere in the middle. There's a sense that an ability to continue doing other work in sport was key for all three, ensuring none are known just for their work on the highlights show. And that breadth of experience - speaking to footballers in different contexts and speaking to athletes from other sports - will only strengthen the quality of their interactions with the rotating team of pundits on Saturday, Sunday and Wednesday nights while allowing them to focus on bringing something unique to viewers. "It's also about making sure we're talking about what people are interested in," Cates says. "And I think that's down to us to not get caught up in being too telly and not get caught up in being too driven by that, but actually to be listening to what fans are saying. It's never been easier to find out than it is now." All three of the new presenters have plenty of experience presenting high-profile sport,from live Premier League matches to the Olympic Games, but there's still something different about Match of the Day. "It's great fun, it's a great privilege, and you're working with great people and you want to be able to relax as the audience hopefully feels at home, so they can sit back and enjoy it," Logan says. "So when that music plays there's always a frisson of excitement, a few little butterflies, and I think you need that for a performance. And that's hopefully going to result in some fantastic shows this season and people will enjoy them." This might be why, even in a period where most of us will know the results long before 10.30 in the evening - and some of us will have already seen the goals - we will still tune in. As Logan herself puts it, the show provides a "full stop" on the day's action, and it's still where so many people will come for the final word. The challenge now is ensuring they want to hear that word from a new team of presenters after the familiarity Lineker built up over a quarter of a century. Match of the Day returns this evening on this opening weekend of the Premier League season, with Chapman in the hotseat on Saturday and Logan on Sunday. The BBC will have highlights available online earlier than ever before this season, with fans able to watch goals online before Match of the Day airs. And this allows whoever is in the chair on any given Saturday to remember what their focus needs to be. "Since the match of the day started, it's been about the highlights, it's about seeing what's happened," Cates acknowledges. "Really we're just there to help."

Athlone edge Peamount United to achieve FAI Cup semi-final spot
Athlone edge Peamount United to achieve FAI Cup semi-final spot

RTÉ News​

time3 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Athlone edge Peamount United to achieve FAI Cup semi-final spot

FAI Cup drama continued as Athlone Town overcame a spirited Peamount United to put themselves in the hat for the semi-final thanks to a goal of the season contender from Aoife O'Connor. In a tense opening, played at a frightening pace it was the hosts, whose performances of late haven't reflected their results, that started confidently. Irish under-19 international Jess Fitzgerald was influential in the middle of the park, beginning a number of intricate moves to keep her team high up by playing the early exchanges in the opposition half. Having weathered the early pressure the visitors, who have had the glamorous distraction of two historic Champions League wins recently, began to grow into the game as their fantastic front three got more involved. Although the Town have been overtaken by Shelbourne at the top of the league, they showed why they are Champions coming from behind at the in-form team in the country in Bohemians to rescue a draw at Dalymount Park but the point came at a cost losing the influential Izzy Groves in the middle of the park. But to counter the busy workload having bolstered the squad in recent weeks with Katharina "Kat" Oelschlaeger and Alexis Stickland with the latter establishing herself in the starting 11 with some impressive displays in the engine room as her side went close to opening the scoring when O'Connor saw her back post header narrowly miss the near post. There was a big scare for the home side when the impressive Eleanor Ryan-Doyle went down midway through the first half with an innocuous looking ankle injury but after some lengthy treatment, was ok to resume. With a war of attrition developing it was going to take something special to break the deadlock, and just after a half hour O'Connor went one better than her miss minutes previous, hitting a stunning right footed effort from 25-yards out that flew in off the underside of the bar. Goal | Aoife O'Connor puts Athlone Town in front against Peamount United 👏 — FAIreland (@FAIreland) August 16, 2025 Immediately after taking the lead, skipper Madie Gibson went agonisingly close to doubling her lead smashing a left footed volley across goal narrowly missing the foot of the post. On the stroke of half-time the American was brilliantly denied by Amanda Budden, in almost a carbon copy of her previous effort, but the former Shels and Shamrock Rovers stopper got down sharply to tip around the post. Following a slightly extended half time break, which saw the Champions receive a ticking off by the officials, both teams were back going hell for leather once again. Just a couple of minutes after the restart Athlone Town thought they had doubled their lead when Gibson's vicious in-swinging corner was touched onto the back post by an under-pressure Budden before being bundled over the line but referee John Sconnie Walsh saw an infringement in the crowd of bodies. The hosts raised the intensity once again, pressing high and forcing their opponents into turning the ball over, leading to an animated Colin Fortune screaming at his team to try get back to passing the ball and take the sting out of the game. Having been restricted to shots from distance, a frustration grew in the home side at where that one clear opportunity to level might come from as Natalie McNally and Shauna Brennan looked imperious at the back. And with a quarter of an hour remaining The Peas did manage to force a couple of corners to build up a head of steam to earn their clearest chance of the half. From yet another quality Fitzgerald delivery, substitute Rebecca Watkins was aggressive winning her header but just couldn't guide the ball on target. With just five minutes remaining Fitzgerald hit a rocket of a free kick from all of thirty yards that looked destined for the roof of the net but at the final moment was acrobatically tipped over by Maria Matthaiou leaving the Peamount bench with their heads in their hands and a feeling that it wouldn't be their day. And with the last kick of the game, Mattaiou proved the hero once again standing big to deny Watkins who had raced clear on goal but at the crucial moment shot straight at the Cypriot keeper. The visitors held strong to book their place in the semi-final and keep the dream of a double this season alive and must dust themselves down as they look forward to hosting title rivals Shelbourne in a mouth-watering clash next Saturday night whilst the Peas travel to Dalymount on Tuesday night looking to put this disappointment behind them. Peamount: Amanda Budden; Lauryn O'Callaghan, Abbie Tuthill, Mary Phillips, Dearbhaile Beirne; Karen Duggan, Jess Fitzgerald; Ellen Dolan, Sadhbh Doyle, Aisling Spillane (Sorcha Melia, 86'); Eleanor Ryan-Doyle (Rebecca Watkins, 46') Athlone Town: Maria Matthaiou; Kellie Brennan, Kayleigh Shine, Natalie McNally, Shauna Brennan: Aoife O'Connor (Kate Slevin, 67'), Sarah Rice; Roisin Molloy, Alexis Strickland, Madison Gibson; Kelly Brady Referee: John Sconnie Walsh Elsewhere, Tr eaty United secured their semi-final spot in a dominant 2-0 win over DLR Waves at the UCD Bowl. Second-half goals from Madelyn Robbins and Bella Flocchini ensured the Shannonsiders progress to the final four of the FAI up for just the second time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store