logo
Ex-Cork GAA star scores winner at Páirc Uí Chaoimh - but Ireland face play-off

Ex-Cork GAA star scores winner at Páirc Uí Chaoimh - but Ireland face play-off

An opening that was written in the stars failed to deliver a fairytale ending.
Ireland got the early goal they craved at Páirc Uí Chaoimh, fittingly delivered by former Cork Gaelic footballer Saoirse Noonan.
Yet despite a dominant Nations League display that saw them camped inside the Slovenian final third for much of the game, that was the end of the scoring.
Carla Ward's side needed a four-goal win to leapfrog Slovenia and earn automatic promotion back to League A, thanks to the 4-0 hammering served up in the reverse fixture earlier in the campaign.
Chance after chance fell, but a combination of poor finishing, brave defending and solid goalkeeping frustrated the Girls in Green, who now face a play-off against a third-placed League A side in their bid to return to the top-flight of European competition.
The celebrations on the visiting bench at the final whistle told its own tale.
Ireland reverted to the three-at-the-back that served them well under Vera Pauw and Eileen Gleeson, after five games with a back-four under Ward.
And there was a first start under the new manager for Caitlin Hayes, the previously ever-present defender, who had managed just 50 minutes over three substitute appearances.
Straight away the Girls in Green looked a lot more resilient at the back, not that they were called to do much defending in the opening half.
It was largely one-way traffic, with Ireland causing plenty of problems on the left, where Katie McCabe and Abbie Larkin linked up to great effect.
On the other flank, Emily Murphy gave her finest display yet in a green jersey and was unlucky not to get her name on the scoresheet.
That honour fell to Cork's own Noonan on 19 minutes, thanks to contributions on either wing from McCabe and Murphy, and a delightful cross by Jessie Stapleton.
McCabe's cross was headed clear, but Murphy was alert enough to retrieve the ball near the right-hand sideline and lay it back to Stapleton.
Her first-time cross was headed high and central by Noonan, over the despairing dive of goalkeeper Zala Mersnik and into the net.
Prior to that, Irish intentions were clearly stated. With less than two minutes on the clock, McCabe's corner was met at the back post by Noonan, and her thumping header was cleared off the line by Zara Kramzar.
Three minutes later and a short corner on the right gave McCabe another opportunity to cross. This time the ball was headed over by a defender as Anna Patten was ready to pounce.
Ireland continued to attack and Denise O'Sullivan slipped the ball inside to Megan Connolly, but her shot was blocked by Sara Agrez, while Larkin drew a save from Mersnik.
The chances continued to fall Ireland's way after Noonan's goal. Kyra Carusa, with her back to goal, attempted to steer the ball on target, but her effort bobbled wide of the right-hand post.
A Murphy header from another left-wing delivery was aimed straight at the goalkeeper, and just past the half-hour mark, Connolly's shot from 20 yards was blocked by Agrez.
Patten couldn't direct her header on target as she stepped across her marker to connect with a McCabe cross. A super piece of skill and link-up play between Noonan and Larkin almost led to an opening.
But a reminder of the need to concentrate at both ends of the pitch was delivered moments before half-time when Lara Prasnikar raced into the area and forced Courtney Brosnan to make a smart save.
Early Irish pressure in the second-half led to a couple of set-pieces, but nothing to cause Mersnik too much trouble.
The same could be said about a Connolly effort from 20 yards that fizzed over the bar in the 59th minute.
The excellent Murphy was denied by a diving block as Irish players, including McCabe and Larkin, queued up to find room to shoot, while on the sideline Ward turned to her bench to freshen up her attack.
On came Amber Barrett for goalscorer Noonan, and long-throw expert Megan Campbell, whose first effort moments after her arrival was headed just wide by Patton.
Murphy fired just over from a tight angle as she raced onto Carusa's lay-off, with Carusa screaming for the ball to be returned to her in the centre.
Hayes should have scored in the 73rd minute when she met Connolly's in-swinging free-kick from the left, but her header sailed wide of the far post.
Murphy then drew a save from Mersnik when she cut in from the left and let fly from 20 yards, while the keeper got her hands to another Murphy effort in the 86th minute - a frustrating end to a frustrating evening.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

HAP caps should be revised regularly to reflect rental market, Ombudsman says
HAP caps should be revised regularly to reflect rental market, Ombudsman says

Irish Times

time32 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

HAP caps should be revised regularly to reflect rental market, Ombudsman says

Overly complex processes and the duplication of work by local authorities causing delays to housing assistance payment (HAP) applications, alongside the refusal of legitimate applications, were among the issues discovered by an Ombudsman investigation. Ombudsman Ger Deering said his office received numerous complaints from the public, and identified shortcomings through voluntary housing and homeless groups regarding the scheme before its investigation. Launched in 2014, the HAP payment to landlords was intended to cover the full cost of a household's rent. Due to significant increases in rent rates, however, two-thirds of HAP households were paying the difference between the HAP cap and the actual cost of rent in 2023. Some 53,742 households were in receipt of HAP at the end of 2024, meaning the same number of rentals have been removed from the private rental sector, the Ombudsman said, contributing to a sustained increase in the rate of rents. READ MORE The availability of rental properties coming under the HAP limits is declining as rents increase, prompting a recommendation from the Ombudsman that caps should be revised on a regular basis to reflect the rental market. [ More than 100 families in Dublin at risk of homelessness as tenant-in-situ applications paused Opens in new window ] Among the findings of its investigation into HAP's administration was a 'duplication of work' being done by local authorities resulting in potential delays. Although households approved for social housing support are immediately eligible for HAP, they must make separate applications, resulting in repetition. The report also highlighted the 'overly complex' requirement for local authorities to seek approval from the HAP shared services centre (SSC) before amendments to HAP records or applications for approval can be made. It noted that the SSC processed 5,821 amendments in one sample month during the investigation. The investigation also found further 'unnecessary delays' when it comes to validating applications and verifying landlords' proof of ownership. Delays increase the risk of inability to secure properties, it said. Separately, the Ombudsman found that some local authorities are refusing HAP applications despite all evidence suggesting a tenancy is legitimate, while others have approved HAP where it should not have been. Local authorities have 'broad discretion' when determining whether a tenancy is genuine, with decisions not always accounting for each case being different or nuanced. In particular, it said local authorities place 'undue weight on family relationships even where all other evidence suggests the tenancy is legitimate'. Separately, despite being legislatively considered socially housed, HAP tenants do not have access to the same benefits as their counterparts in standard social housing such as tailored arrears repayment plans. These inequities pose a risk of HAP tenants falling into a 'poverty trap,' it said. 'This unfairness is compounded by the fact that they do not have the security of tenure that their counterparts in other forms of social housing have,' the Ombudsman said.

Tadhg Beirne: ‘It had only been a year since I had been let go by Leinster. To be back there and to get that result with Scarlets was pretty special'
Tadhg Beirne: ‘It had only been a year since I had been let go by Leinster. To be back there and to get that result with Scarlets was pretty special'

Irish Independent

time35 minutes ago

  • Irish Independent

Tadhg Beirne: ‘It had only been a year since I had been let go by Leinster. To be back there and to get that result with Scarlets was pretty special'

The Munster and Ireland player talks about the historic game that changed everything for him at 15, getting spotted to play for Leinster and embracing every opportunity I was lucky enough to go to the Ireland versus England game in the 2007 Six Nations. That sticks out to me as a massive moment growing up. I was not long playing rugby at school and was starting to take a real interest in it. That game made such an impact and was an eye-opener for me as a kid. It gave me a real itch to play the game. There was such a huge build-up with the match being played at Croke Park and England coming over. The anthems, ahead of the game, will always stay with me. There was respect for the English anthem, then this unbelievable noise for the Irish anthems. You could see how much it meant to the players there. Some were singing while others were crying. Some were doing both. Real goose bumps stuff. It showed you how much it meant to everyone. You just had this feeling that it was going to be a special game. Crazy atmosphere.

Senegal: An elite, unbeaten opponent whose government nonetheless ousted their most successful coach
Senegal: An elite, unbeaten opponent whose government nonetheless ousted their most successful coach

The 42

time43 minutes ago

  • The 42

Senegal: An elite, unbeaten opponent whose government nonetheless ousted their most successful coach

THE TEAM THAT created history at the 2002 World Cup will on Friday be without their most famous player as they face the team that created headlines at the 2002 World Cup for being without their most famous player. And this, dear reader, is about all Ireland and Senegal have had to link them in more than 60 years of international football. Tomorrow's friendly will be the first meeting of the sides. The fact that many European nations are busy with World Cup qualifiers and Nations League finals narrowed Ireland's potential friendly opponents for this window, and Senegal were close to town given they are playing England in a friendly in Nottingham next week. Senegal will be in Dublin without their most recognisable star, as former Liverpool forward Sadio Mane – now playing alongside Cristiano Ronaldo at Al-Nassr in Saudi Arabia – has asked to be excused from duty. Also missing is the captain of the 2002 side that went all the way to the quarter-finals in Japan and South Korea, Aliou Cissé. Cissé was first elevated to the manager's job on an interim basis in 2012, and then returned to the job full-time in 2015. From there he made all manner of history. First, in 2018, his Senegal side became the first team ever eliminated from the World Cup group phase on the fair play rule – accumulating the higher number of cards across their three games – and a year later led Senegal to their first Afcon final since he was captain in 2002, where they were beaten by Algeria. Sadio Mane celebrates with the Afcon trophy in 2021. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Two years later, however, they returned to the final once again, and won a penalty shootout against Egypt. It was their first ever continental triumph. England ended their interest in the last-16 phase of the 2022 World Cup, with a depleted Senegal side beaten 3-0. Cissé, though, retained the confidence of the Senegalese FA and he was supposed to see the team through to the 2026 World Cup. The government, however, disagreed. Though the notion seems anathema to the European mind, it is common across African football for the government to pay the salary of the national team coach. (The Irish taxpayer may have saved the FAI from insolvency five years ago, but we are not directly covering Heimir Hallgrimsson's salary.) This practice somehow avoids Fifa's demand that a national football association be free of direct political interference, and so it is the case in Senegal. The FA had agreed a two-year extension with Cissé last year, only for the government to refuse to pay it, saying Cissé had not achieved his objectives, namely qualifying for the quarter-finals of the Qatar World Cup and defending their AFCON title a year later. The sports ministry acted, they said, out of fear for 'the risk of disaffection between our national team and the Senegalese in general.' Advertisement The president of the Senegalese FA said he was 'very sad' to see Cissé leave, and spoke plainly of their opposition to the political decision. 'The agenda of the government is not the same as the agenda of football,' Augustin Senghor told BBC Sport Africa. 'They decided and, unfortunately, we could not oppose it.' Cissé has been replaced by a former assistant, Pape Thiaw, and it is his job to squeeze the last drops out of Senegal's medal-winning generation, including Mane, centre-back Kalidou Koulibaly, goalkeeper Edouard Mendy, and midfielder Idrissa Gana Gueye. They are buttressed by a younger generation of talent, which includes Chelsea striker Nicolas Jackson, Tottenham's Pape Sarr, and Monaco midfielder Lamine Camara. Senegal are in a battle even to make the next World Cup, sitting second in their group, a point behind leaders DR Congo, though with a points total currently good enough to make the play-offs. They remain unbeaten, with three wins and three draws from six matches, and their primary problem has been goalscoring: they have eight goals thus far, though four of them came in a single game against South Sudan and they have dropped points in goalless draws against Togo and Sudan. They are, however, unbeaten in their last 22 matches, save a penalty shootout loss to Ivory Coast in the last-16 of the 2023 Afcon. In fact, a 1-0 loss to Algeria in a friendly in September 2023 is their only defeat since the World Cup exit to England, stretching across 26 games. Ireland boss Heimir Hallgrimsson is anticipating the kind of stiff test to ready his side for the World Cup qualifier matches with Portugal later this year. 'If you look at their matches and how they play, massive physicality, I'd say not only speed but running power, they come at you again and again', says Hallgrimsson. 'They look for the space behind you. If you watch Afcon, against a team like Senegal, [opponents] always need to play in a low block, so they are specialists in finding pockets to play into a run into, a third man running in, so we will be tested defensively, massively, in this game if they play like they have done. 'It's amazing for a national team to play 22 games without losing. 'Individual qualities, similar to Portugal, all players can hurt you so one-v-ones will be massively important. Everything happens a little bit quicker, when we need to defend and that's a good step, if we are ready for that it's a good preparation for Hungary and Portugal. 'It's a different kind of opponent, they are looking for spaces behind us and it doesn't happen that often in Europe, normally there are a few passes before the teams play behind us but that's one of the things we need to look at and improve.' It's fair to say Hallgrimsson does not share the same disapproving opinion of the Senegalese sports ministry.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store