
St Pat's outplayed by classy Besiktas in Conference League
An unintended consequence of Evan Ferguson landing in Roma on loan for the season was visited upon
St Patrick's Athletic
at Tallaght Stadium.
The opportunity only opened for Ferguson to revive his career in Italy after Tammy Abraham demanded an exit from the Giallorossi.
The rangy English striker landed in Istanbul, where he is set for a prolific run in the Turkish Super Lig with the chance to make the move permanent at a bargain price of €13 million.
Abraham had his hat-trick by half-time.
READ MORE
After the third goal, a penalty he coolly slotted past Joseph Anang, the former Chelsea forward turned to the dugout to assure his manager
Ole GOle Gunnar Solskjaer everything was going to be just fine.
There will be no need for Roy Keane to catch a flight from Manchester to Oslo, rent a car and set off on a seven-hour drive to his old teammate's hometown of Kristiansund. That's what Keane did when Manchester United sacked Solskjaer in 2021.
The Besiktas manager was under pressure since Shakhtar Donetsk relegated them last week from the Europa League to the Conference League qualifiers. Clearly, they belong at a higher level.
With a team stacked full of internationals who shined at Euro 2024, Besiktas were runaway favourites before kick-off. Inside eight minutes, they had St Pat's players staring into the void when Joao Mário's speculative shot from the edge of the box deflected off Joe Redmond and nestled in Anang's net.
Pats' Joe Redmond and Tammy Abraham of Beşiktaş. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
Inside 43 minutes, this two-legged contest was cooked. 4-0. Way beyond the point of no return, the pace of the Turkish players had their Irish opponents bamboozled. There was no outball. No clear route to an isolated Mason Melia.
Jake Mulraney and Simon Power can torch any team – at St Pat's level – but whenever Besiktas lost the ball all 10 outfield players flowed like water, seamlessly adopting a 5-3-2 formation that invited the wingers to hare down culs-de-sac.
Mostly, St Pat's were trapped in their own half. Kenny has spoken before about avoiding a low block against superior opponents, but what choice did they have?
Plata O Plomo. Silver or lead. That was the impossible choice offered to St Pat's against a highly motivated Besiktas.
From the off, Turkish international Orkun Kokcu quietly ran the game from midfield.
The visitors were confident enough to unveil a prematch protest, with T-shirts to highlight the genocide in Gaza: 'Stop crimes against humanity – enough is enough.' Fenerbahce made the same gesture before their European game against Feyenoord.
Abraham can score any which way. His first goal was blasted from two yards off a Jonas Svensson cross.
The second was a delicious scoop over Anang after Tom Grivosti went to ground early and decided not to tackle from behind.
The third was a spot kick to punish Jamie Lennon for kicking him in the box.
It was a harsh, yet correct call. VAR concurred.
Pats' Mason Melia and Emirhan Topçu of Beşiktaş. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
St Pat's refused to be humiliated. Early in the second half, Power came off the left and raced clear to beat Mert Gunok at his near post.
The local contingent in a 7,821 crowd, that was sprinkled with Turkish residents in Ireland, celebrated like the tie was alive and kicking.
It almost was when Melia's snapshot from close range hit Gunok's leg in the 55th minute.
At 4-2, Stephen Kenny's go-for-broke approach would have been rewarded. The former Republic of Ireland manager left St Pat's wide open as he sought to create mismatches down the left for Power.
The 27-year-old winger has been unplayable at times this season. The second half was one of those times.
Melia also ignored the scoreboard. The Tottenham-bound teenager dropped into pockets to use his close control to release Power and anyone willing to put in the effort. Kian Leavy refused to disappear. As did the evergreen Chris Forrester, who drew a save from Gunok on 75 minutes.
Anang denied Rafa Silva and Keny Arroyo from making it 5-1 with quick reflexes but the contest was already in cruise control.
St Pat's have not been able to catch a break of late. No team deserves to draw Besiktas in a Conference League qualifier.
Lying sixth in the Premier Division, six points off Derry City in the last European spot with 10 games remaining, the last 45 minutes here must be transferred to Richmond Park when Sligo Rovers visit on Saturday.
There is little to be gained from Thursday's second-leg in Istanbul, which arguably stacks the entire season on avoiding defeat against Shelbourne in the FAI Cup last 16 tie at Richmond on Sunday week.
St Patrick's Athletic:
Anang; McLaughlin, Redmond, Grivosti (Turner 46), McClelland; Forrester (Baggley 82), Lennon, Leavy (Carty 82); Mulraney (Sjoberg 46), Melia (Kavanagh 88), Power.
Besiktas:
Gunok; Svensson (Bingol 46), Paulista, Topcu, Jurasek (Sanuc 90); Tiknaz (Yilmaz 75), Kokcu (Hadžiahmetović); Mário, Silva, Muci (Arroyo 59); Abraham.
Referee:
David Smajc (Slovenia).
Hashtags

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


Irish Examiner
10 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Laois banish demons to grasp glorious redemption
Armagh 2-15 Laois 0-12 In a game that ebbed and flowed, Laois started and finished well to banish the heartache of last year's one-point defeat and earn a deserved victory in the Glen Dimplex All-Ireland premier junior camogie final. It is a third defeat for Armagh in the decider since their triumph in 2020 and there were periods when it looked like they would get over the line this time. Once Laois solved the conundrum of Eimear Hayes cutting out so many of their deliveries and getting passages of play going that led to Rachael Merry and Sinéad Quinn being such a threat, they began to get a real toehold in proceedings, however. The unrelated Delaneys, Gráinne and Susie were outstanding, the latter on a day her aunt, Jovita was being honoured as part of the Tipperary jubilee team. Aimee Collier, who had endured a tough day from placed balls 12 months ago, was unerring this time around, and apart from finishing with seven points, her ball-winning and offloading when moved to the wing was pivotal. The final piece of the jigsaw was the impact off the bench, as minor recruit Amy Daly rattled the net in the 50th minute. Lucy Conroy had pointed earlier, her piledriver glancing off the upright. It was the best possible start in the game for the side managed by Pat Collier and Rob Jones, when Gráinne Delaney goaled after 54 seconds. The Camross attacker and official player of the match was set free by Susie Delaney and with her marker seemingly expecting her to cut back onto her left immediately, she drove directly into space before firing off the ciotóg to the net. Eimear Hassett pointed sweetly immediately after but a converted free by Rachael Merry settled Armagh. PJ O'Mullan's crew hit seven of the next eight points to move two clear. Merry slotted two frees either side of an excellent score from Niamh Forker to draw level. After Collier split the posts from a free at the other end, Merry's two frees were followed up by an outstanding effort from Quinn, whose mother Geraldine Haughey was All-Ireland winner in the orange and white when Galway were defeated in a replay in 1993. It was Laois' turn to hit a purple patch though with three points from inspirational skipper Clodagh Tynan, Collier (free) and Gráinne Delaney to edge their noses in front before Merry restored parity just before the interval. The Orchard outfit enjoyed the ideal resumption, Quinn taking a pass from Merry to raise a white flag and Corinna Doyle striking the game's marquee point, leaving a trail of Laois defenders in her wake under the Hogan Stand before hitting the target from wide on the right and just inside the 45. That made it 0-10 to 1-5 and just 33 minutes elapsed but that was as good as it got for Armagh as Laois found another couple of gears. An unbroken run of a goal and six points enabled them to overhaul their valiant opponents and establish enough of a lead that given the flow of play as the game evolved, just did not look likely to be reeled in. Collier, Kaylee O'Keeffe and Conroy were on target before Daly blasted to the Armagh net. There didn't look loads on, when Susie Delaney sent Collier into the corner. The tall attacker held it up well and looked around, opting for a stick-pass back out the field. It actually overshot the mark a small bit but that proved ideal for Gráinne Delaney, who had open country to use her speed. Suddenly she had created overlap and with the execution of the hand-pass to her young and diminutive teammate perfect, Daly made no mistake with only Ciarrai Devlin to beat. There was no way back from that for Armagh, and though they fought to the end, Merry converting two frees after a glorious Susie Delaney point, it was Collier that had the last say with a point from play and monster of a score from a free before the celebrations kicked into gear. SCORERS FOR LAOIS: A Collier 0-7(6fs); G Delaney 1-2; A Daly 1-0; K O'Keeffe 0-2; E Hassett, C Tynan, S Delaney, L Conroy 0-1 each SCORERS FOR ARMAGH: R Merry 0-8(7fs); S Quinn 0-2; N Forker, C Doyle 0-1 each LAOIS: A Lowry, F Scully, E Conroy, L Finaly, A Walsh, C Tynan, S Creagh, A Tynan, Líadan C Fennell, G Delaney, K Keenan, E Hassett, K O'Keeffe, A Collier, E Hassett. Sub: L Conroy for Keenan (28); A Daly for E Hassett (42); L Keyes for Walsh (54); S Jones for Fennell (60+1) ARMAGH: C Devlin, M O'Hare, G McCann, E Hayes, ML Loughran, M McCone, A McEntee, G Gaffney, C Hill, M O'Callaghan, K Convie, N Forker, R Merry, S Quinn, C Doyle. Subs: F Loughran for L Loughran, E McGeary for Gaffney (both 42); L McConnell for Forker (54) REFEREE: Enda Loughnane (Galway)


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Live All-Ireland camogie final updates: Galway look to stop Cork's pursuit of three-in-a-row
Junior final: Armagh 0-12 Laois 2-15 Intermediate final: Offaly v Kerry, 3pm Senior final: Cork v Galway, 5.15pm 1 minute ago 1 Mins: The intermediate final has now thrown in. Offaly get the opening score through Clodagh Leahy. Offaly 0-1 Kerry 0-0 2 minutes ago Hello and welcome to live updates of today's All-Ireland Camogie finals in Croke Park. Cork face Galway in their pursuit of a three-in-a-row victory in the senior final at 5.15pm. It's a replay of last year's showpiece game, where the Rebels triumphed by a goal. In the intermediate final at 3pm, Kerry face Offaly as they attempt to make the step up to senior level. Meanwhile, Laois were 2-15 to 0-12 winners over Armagh in the junior final which threw in at 1pm.


Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Peter Keane steps down as Clare senior football manager
Peter Keane has stepped down as manager of the Clare senior footballers after one season in charge. In a statement shared by Clare GAA on Sunday, the Kerryman said 'a combination of factors' had influenced his decision, 'namely growing business demands, plus travel and time challenges'. Keane was appointed to the role last October, succeeding his county man Mark Fitzgerald, who had filled the role for one season. Prior to Fitzgerald, Colm Collins had spent a decade in charge of the Banner footballers. This season, Clare reached a third successive Munster final, again falling to Kerry in the decider on May 4th. In the All-Ireland series, the Banner were drawn in Group 3, in which they suffered defeats to Down, Monaghan and Louth to see them out of the championship. READ MORE 'I really enjoyed my time working with a great panel of footballers, whose commitment and dedication was first class,' Keane's statement on his departure read. 'Their desire to be better footballers and play for their county at the highest level was exemplary.' Keane thanked his management and backroom teams for their work and commitment over the past season, and the players 'for their total commitment, positive attitude, and dedication', wishing them 'the very best for the future'. Clare GAA chairman Kieran Keating expressed his thanks to Keane 'for the professionalism and dedication he brought to the role, to follow on from the encouraging development of our senior football panel by his predecessors'. 'I know from discussing Clare football matter with Peter over the past year that his interest in our cause was genuine and his engagement with our players was always enthusiastic and forthright,' Keating added. 'The logistics of his journey to Clare a number of times a week for the duration of the season proved difficult to manage alongside his business interests and personal/family commitments, and whilst we had sincerely hoped Peter could remain in the manager's role, we accept his decision with the grace he brought to the appointment.' Keating concluded the county will now look to appoint Keane's replacement 'as soon as practicable to ensure we are prepared and ready for the 2026 season'.