logo
Shamrock Rovers trailing after first leg defeat to Ballkani

Shamrock Rovers trailing after first leg defeat to Ballkani

RTÉ News​a day ago
Shamrock Rovers will feel they have enough about them to progress to the play-off round of the UEFA Conference League despite trailing 1-0 to Kosovan side FC Ballkani after the first leg of their third round qualifying clash.
Sunday Adetunji scored the only goal of this game at the Fadil Vokrri Stadium in Pristina to hand the Kosovans the advantage ahead of the return leg at Tallaght Stadium next Thursday.
Premier Division leaders Rovers were nowhere near their best in this one against an outfit who are yet to start their domestic campaign. Stephen Bradley's side struggled to find the higher gears on a frustrating night for the Dublin outfit who will be disappointed with the lack of opportunities created.
The Hoops boss made just the one change from last weekend's league win over Derry City. Darragh Nugent came in for Aaron McEneff, while Roberto Lopes' start in defence saw the Cape Verde international become Rovers' record appearance holder in Europe, his 48th turnout in continental competition, one ahead of the previous holder Ronan Finn.
Without heavy hitters such as McEneff, Jack Byrne, Graham Burke and Trevor Clarke through injury, the visitors were happy to go in scoreless at half-time in this one.
There was an early tactical mix-up from the Kosovans who somehow allowed the unmarked Nugent the freedom of the Hoops' final third. However, Danny Mandroiu's through pass lacked the necessary finesse as his over-hit ball ended up going through to Adnan Golubovic in the Ballkani goal.
The Suhareka-based side, who begin their season next weekend, threatened Ed McGinty's goal on several occasions throughout the opening period.
Nigerian striker Adetunji was just short of Brazilian wide-man Giovanni's cross on 12 minutes. Adetunji arrived a split-second too late to meet the Sao Paulo native's ball from the left, to the expense of McGinty who Adetunji crashed into in the aftermath.
McGinty, thankfully recovered, had to show a strong fist to beat away Geralb Smajli's stinger from 20 yards out on Ballkani's next attack three minutes later.
Orges Shehi's charges looked to expose Rovers' right side again on 20 when Almir Kryeziu pulled inside only to pull his resulting shot well wide of the target.
The Hoops were struggling somewhat to retain possession inside the opposition half, but were themselves comfortable with what their opponents could throw at them.
There was a moment of worry for the travelling support on 34 when a short Ballkani corner ended up with Ardit Deliu. But the Albanian sliced his shot narrowly wide of McGinty's goal from the edge of the 'D'.
The former Sligo Rovers stopper had to keep an eye on Kryeziu's mishit cross nine minutes from the interval which sailed over McGinty and beyond his far post.
Stephen Bradley's men pulled a first save from Golubovic before the break after the hosts lost Ivica Batarelo to a suspected hamstring pull.
The goalkeeper's acrobatics saw him take Josh Honohan's header from a Dylan Watts corner off his own line at full stretch.
In what was the first meeting between a Kosovan and an Irish side in European competition, it was Rovers who fashioned the first chance of the second period. However, Mandroiu was unable to sort his feet out in time to guide Honohan's squared ball beyond Golubovic from close range six minutes after the re-start.
Rovers were made to regret this on 56 minutes when the hosts hit the front.
Adetunji's deft touch to take in Geralb Smajli's assist and send Dan Cleary out of the game bought the striker the space to compose himself before executing a calm finish beyond McGinty.
Ballkani, who knocked out Maltese side Floriana in the previous round, should have punished Rovers further before the hour but Kryeziu could only blaze over after McGinty had denied Walid Hamidi's drive from the angle.
The busy McGinty then had to use both hands to keep hold of an effort from Kryeziu as the home side looked to double their advantage against a now faltering Hoops.
Giovanni flashed a left footer past the post after the Rovers rearguard struggled to get rid of a route one ball forward from the Ballkani back line.
Golubovic was again Ballkani's hero in the second minute of added time at the end of this first leg. The Slovenian net minder again denied another Honanhan header, this time from a Watts set piece from the Rovers left.
FC Ballkani: Adnan Golubovic; Geralb Smajli, Ivica Batarelo (Bajram Jashanica 39), Gentrit Halili, Arber Potoku (Elvis Letaj 86); Ardit Deliu, Giovanni, Albert Diene; Walid Hamidi (Bleart Tolaj 65), Sunday Adetunji, Almir Kryeziu.
Shamrock Rovers: Ed McGinty; Lee Grace, Roberto Lopes, Dan Cleary; Josh Honohan, Danny Grant; Matt Healy, Danny Mandroiu, Darragh Nugent (Connor Malley 60), Dylan Watts; Rory Gaffney (Michael Noonan 60).
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Cobh Ramblers get job done early to stay within touch of leaders Dundalk
Cobh Ramblers get job done early to stay within touch of leaders Dundalk

Irish Examiner

time10 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Cobh Ramblers get job done early to stay within touch of leaders Dundalk

BRAY WANDERERS 0 COBH RAMBLERS 2 (Cian Bargary 8, Barry Coffey 20) Two early goals by Cian Bargary and Barry Coffey give Cobh Ramblers the edge over Bray Wanderers as Dundalk's title rivals heading into the final series of games. Dundalk's quest for an immediate to the Premier division remained on course despite a minor hiccup of falling behind at home to Athlone Town, but Cobh remain within six points off the leaders with nine matches left. Bray spurned the chance of leapfrogging the Rams into that runner-up berth, conceding goals 12 minutes apart to fall five points adrift in third. Teen genius Billy O'Neill showed flashes of his repertoire for Bray, attracting comparisons with Damien Duff. He made the short journey from his Wicklow home for the fixture, a first sighting on the League of Ireland circuit since quitting the Premier champions Shelbourne in June. Damian Duff at the Carlisle Grounds . Photograph Moya Nolan While Bray looked assured of a playoff spot, at this stage it appears the only threat Dundalk face during the run-up will come from Leeside. Manager Mick McDermott always contended he was happy to stay within shooting distance until the latter stages, potentially setting up a final day decider at St Colman's Park when the sides meet on October 17. His confidence stems from his side overcoming off-field upheaval to not only retain their players but strengthen in this window. US-based group Digital Athlete Ventures stepped in three weeks ago to take a 90% stake of the club, ending the uncertainty created by the withdrawal of another foreign group, FC32. Failure to land a suitable backer would have led to a crisis, not just for Cobh but the league itself. Instead, they could rid themselves of being the First Division club longest without being in the top-flight. Turbulence has been a watchword since that 2008 season in the Premier. All McDermott can do is ensure he fulfils his part on the pitch. He's helped by having his team's backbone composed of Cork City's title-winning team from last season. Jonas Häkkinen and new capture Dylan McGlade were part of the City team that won the 2022 season but the two goalscorers, along with captain Cian Coleman at the back and Cian Murphy up top, constitute a quartet with recent experience of emerging from the second tier. Another former City player, goalkeeper Jimmy Corcoran, was pressurised from a couple of early Cobh corners. There was nothing he could do about the breakthrough from one of those deliveries on eight minutes. Following pinball in the box, Bargary was first to react by unleashing a shot across his body that flew into the top corner. Coffey's reputation as a free-scoring attacking midfielder was maintained by him popping up in a crowded penalty area to slot the loose ball into the bottom corner. In response, Bray's Paul Murphy had a shot blocked, the same obstacle Rhys Bradley encountered when connecting with a corner. Substitute Justin Ferizaj smashed the ball over with 20 minutes left but at the other end Rhys Gourdie was off-target with his volley at back post. BRAY WANDERERS: J Corcoran; J Duggan (A Kzenga 53), K Cantwell, P Murphy, M Murphy; S Brennan, R Bartley (R Knight 46); B O'Neill, C Doyle (J Ferizaj 67), C Knight (J Ferizaj 53);C Curtis (G Almirall 67). COBH RAMBLERS: T Martin; I Hughes (J Häkkinen 63), C Coleman, Shane A Griffin (J Abbott 83), L Le Bervet; N O'Keeffe (R Goudrie 63), H Cribb; C Bargary (S Bellis 71), B Coffey (D McGlade 72), Shane Griffin; C Murphy. Referee: Daniel Murphy (Dublin). Attendance: 1,213.

How Morecambe FC faces possible EXTINCTION amid financial mess as fans despair with just 11 days left to find new owner
How Morecambe FC faces possible EXTINCTION amid financial mess as fans despair with just 11 days left to find new owner

The Irish Sun

time11 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

How Morecambe FC faces possible EXTINCTION amid financial mess as fans despair with just 11 days left to find new owner

Fans blame the club's demise on Essex-based owner Jason Whittingham for not fulfilling his promise to sell the crisis-hit club BRING BACK THE SUNSHINE How Morecambe FC faces possible EXTINCTION amid financial mess as fans despair with just 11 days left to find new owner STARING at the giant Morecambe FC flag bearing the legend Bring Me Sunshine, tears fill club worker Colette Davies' eyes. 'There's no sunshine right now,' weeps the mum of three. 'It's more like dark, black clouds.' Advertisement 8 Morecambe have missed the final deadline and are on the brink of being kicked out the National League 8 Bring Me Sunshine — the signature tune of the town's most famous son, Eric Morecambe isn't likely to echo around the stadium any time soon Credit: Alamy 8 Colette, whose job is 'housekeeper' for the players, says she and other fans are experiencing 'absolute heartbreak' Belted out by fans on match day, Bring Me Sunshine — the signature tune of the town's most famous son, Eric Morecambe — is unlikely to echo around the Shrimps' stadium any time soon. Mired in a financial mess, the club has been suspended by the National League for its first three games this season. If the Lancs club is not sold by August 20, they may be kicked out of the league altogether. Possible extinction of this 105-year-old institution would be a devastating blow for a seaside resort that has seen its tourism industry decimated by cheap package holidays abroad. Advertisement Standing next to the club's well-manicured pitch, Colette, whose job is 'housekeeper' for the players, says she and other fans are experiencing 'absolute heartbreak'. For Colette and many who pack the Halo home stand on match days, the Shrimps are a family affair. Her dad Les Dewhirst has been the club's kit man for the last 30 years and her three children are all ­Morecambe mad. Les told me he is too upset to be interviewed, saying: 'It's hurting so much and my head won't settle.' Advertisement Ghostly sadness As seagulls wheel overhead, Colette adds: 'There's been lots of tears and anger. When I have to go home and tell my boys that I don't know what's going on at the club, there's absolute heartbreak. They're 14 and 15. This club is their life.' Like other staff at the club, Colette has not been paid since May. With tears rolling down her cheeks, she tells me that new school uniforms for her children are 'on hold'. Tyson Fury opens up on relationship with Joseph Parker and claims he's now his 'part-time manager and financial advisor' 'It's the school holidays, so there's been no fun activities really for my kids because we just can't afford it,' she adds. The giant Bring Me Sunshine flag — complete with a silhouette of a skipping Eric Morecambe, a shrimp and the red rose of Lancashire — stands limp in the sunshine at the back of the Halo stand. Advertisement Despite being born in the resort. the comic genius was famously a Luton Town fan and club director. As with a closed-down pub, a ghostly sadness haunts a shuttered football ground where laughter and emotion once reverberated. Planned weddings, wakes and school proms booked at the 6,241- capacity Mazuma Stadium this summer have all been cancelled. One corner of the stadium is ­occupied by local hero Tyson Fury's gym. Many in the town are hoping the former heavyweight boxing world champ will step in as a white knight to save the club. Advertisement As yet, there has been no word on a possible takeover from the big man. Colette shows me the empty changing rooms where everything is neat and tidy for when the players should be preparing to face Brackley Town next Saturday. Like today's away fixture at Boston United, it has been postponed. Playing in England's third tier as recently as 2021, only a world war has stopped the Shrimps fulfilling their fixtures until now. Fans blame the demise on Essex-based owner Jason Whittingham for not fulfilling his promise to sell the crisis-hit club. Advertisement On Wednesday, Sir Keir Starmer said he was 'very concerned' about the plight of Morecambe FC and urged everyone involved with the club 'to do the right thing'. 8 .Season ticket holder Helen Coates, 56, buying a replica shirt for her grandson Coby, 5 8 Railway worker Russ Horrocks, 38, and son Noah, 11 8 Official kit supplier Terrace's director Carl Sewell says cash from the merchandise will not reach owner Whittingham's pockets Advertisement Supporters have this week been queuing at a pop-up shop on the promenade to buy this season's shirts, even though their team may never get to wear them. There was a forlorn sense of despondency along the usually jaunty seafront as hundreds waited for hours to make their purchase. Railway worker Russ Horrocks, 38, snapped up the away shirt for son Noah, 11, saying: 'Morecambe's a great atmosphere on match days. 'There's 4,000 on a good day, but the noise makes it sound like more. It's as much about meeting your mates as the result.' Advertisement Retired Alan McGinley, 62, whose brother John played for the club, revealed: 'The club is everything for this town now the tourism has been hit. My brother used to get a pork pie for playing and £1 if he scored.' A banner reading, 'Bring back the sunshine' was strapped to railings at the store run by official kit supplier Terrace. Its director, Carl Sewell, says cash from the merchandise will not reach owner Whittingham's pockets, adding: 'We sold around 1,500 shirts in just four hours.' Of the club's slip towards possible exclusion from the league, he said: 'It's horrendous. It will suck the blood out of the town and hit local businesses.' Season ticket holder Helen Coates, 56, buying a replica shirt for her grandson Coby, five, added: 'I don't know what I'm going to do with my Saturdays now. Advertisement 'I took my sons to watch ­Morecambe, I now take my grandsons. It was only £3 for little ones. It makes me want to weep.' With stunning views of the Lake District fells, Morecambe became a seaside destination for Yorkshire ­factory workers when a connecting rail line was built around 1850. The club is everything for this town now the tourism has been hit. My brother used to get a pork pie for playing and £1 if he scored. Alan McGinley The resort boomed in the 20th Century — with Scottish holidaymakers also being drawn to it — before no- frills flights to the Med dented its popularity. It had been home to the country's largest Pontins holiday camp, but the last Bluecoats left in 1994. Advertisement Morecambe's once iconic pair of piers are long gone, as is its famous Bubbles swimming pool and the Frontierland fairground. Hope is offered by an £80million scheme to construct a northern ­version of the Eden Project botanical garden on the seafront. Shrimps season ticket holder David Lambert, 63, points down the promenade and tells me: 'This town used to be packed out at this time of year. 'You couldn't walk along that prom for people. At least on Saturdays the football would give this place a buzz. Away fans would come and walk along the prom, go to the pubs and have fish and chips. That might all be gone now.' Advertisement 'Used to be packed out' Morecambe's once mighty fleet of shrimp fishing boats has also been in steep decline. Ray Edmondson still stocks his little fishmongers with shrimps caught from his boat, the Bernadette. The fisherman says there were 30 shrimp boats when he started out. Now there are just two. He blames 'too many rules and regulations'. Advertisement Ray, who has run his business for 47 years, adds: 'Away fans come in here to buy a few pots of shrimps and take them home with them.' Nearby, staff at Atkinson's Fish & Chips are worried they could lose a decent slice of trade if the football club goes under. The football helps many hospitality businesses through the lean winter months. Bernie Harkin, 52, who has grafted in the shop for 26 years, tells me: 'Fans love our chips with a bit of haddock. The football club is such an important part of the town. Advertisement 'We have our Christmas parties at the stadium.' 8 The club has been suspended by the National League for its first three games this season 8 One corner of the stadium is ­occupied by local hero Tyson Fury's gym Credit: Getty Barman Zac Rossall, 19, serving pints at the Eric Bartholomew — a Wetherspoon pub bearing Eric Morecambe's real name — says: 'It gets packed here on match day. Advertisement 'I'm not a football fan, but I'm a fan of what it brings to Morecambe. 'If the club closes, it will mean less footfall in the town.' So why is Morecambe in such a financial mess? In 2023, Jason Whittingham's Bond Group Investments announced it was selling the club to investment firm Panjab Warriors. The company loaned £6million to the Shrimps as the club descended into financial turmoil with unpaid bills, sackings and resignations. Advertisement Panjab Warriors are ready to take Morecambe off his hands, but Whittingham says he has an ­alternative buyer. 'Club is held hostage' Last month, Whittingham sacked the Shrimps' board of directors after they threatened to place the club into administration. Morecambe MP Lizzi Collinge has raised the issue in Parliament and said: 'Morecambe FC is being held ­hostage and it breaks my heart.' In June the Shrimps' players were only paid a third of their salaries. Many have now chosen to leave the club to pay their mortgages. Advertisement One player forced to quit, ­midfielder Tom White, 28, said: 'Morecambe Football Club is special. This institution needs to ­survive, and I'm praying.' A town that followed its football club to Wembley three times since 1974 now may lose its cornerstone. While a new Morecambe could rise from the ashes if the club is booted out of the league, it would then likely have to take its place at the bottom of the football pyramid. Bury FC, who were expelled from the Football League for financial difficulties in 2019, have invited Shrimps fans to watch their match free today 'in solidarity'. Advertisement Dozens are planning on making the journey. And they will be ­supporting another club that understands how ­football binds a community together.

Johnny Kenny signs new four-year Celtic deal as ex-Ireland U21 star targets Champions League glory
Johnny Kenny signs new four-year Celtic deal as ex-Ireland U21 star targets Champions League glory

The Irish Sun

time11 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Johnny Kenny signs new four-year Celtic deal as ex-Ireland U21 star targets Champions League glory

Former Ireland Under-21 star Johnny Kenny has penned a new long-term deal with Celtic - vowing to fire goals, win trophies and shine on the Champions League stage JOHNNY KENNY has signed a new four-year contract with Celtic as he targets Champions League glory at Parkhead. Former Ireland Under-21 striker Kenny, 22, was in the final 12 months of his deal at Celtic that alerted admirers as Bolton had a £500,000 bid rejected. 2 Johnny Kenny has penned an extensions with Glasgow Celtic 2 The ex-Ireland U21 star has vowed to help the Hoops in European competition But the Sligo man's preference was to remain in Glasgow and he has now signed a deal that will keep him at Parkhead until 2029. Kenny said: 'All I wanted to do was commit my future to this club and I'm delighted it's done now. 'I feel really proud. I spoke to the manager at the start of the summer and it was a case of tying it all together. 'I like to think that I can score goals and the manager believes in me too, so that helps when I'm in and around the box, knowing that the manager backs me. 'I want to achieve everything possible at this club. I want to play Champions League football, win every trophy available and score goals. That's my aim.' Kenny joined Celtic in 2022 from hometown club Sligo Rovers having burst onto the scene in 2021 as an 18-year-old scoring 12 goals. He went straight into the Bhoys development team before a tough loan spell at Queen's Park where he made just two starts but then returned to Ireland on loan at Shamrock Rovers. His first season in Tallaght saw him score five goals but he was a star in 2024 scoring 20 goals in all competitions as he helped the Hoops through the Conference League. Rovers' hoped to keep him on loan for the first half of this season, including their Conference League knockout tie with Molde. But he returned to Celtic and made his long awaited debut before featuring regularly in the final months of the season, including the Scottish Cup final. Lookman to the Premier League? Arsenal and Forest in Transfer War He came off the bench last weekend as the Bhoys began their season with a 1-0 win over St Mirren as Brendan Rodgers predicted a bright future for the 22-year-old at Celtic Park. Rodgers said: 'I am really pleased that we have agreed this new contract with Johnny. He is a young player who I believe can have a big future with Celtic. 'He loves the club and is really hungry and focused on doing well for us, developing further and making an important contribution to the squad, so we look forward to working with him moving forward.'

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