
Ireland denied Nations Cup win in shootout loss to NZ
Ireland's women were beaten in a shootout by New Zealand in the final of the FIH Nations Cup in Chile.The game finished 1-1, with New Zealand winning the penalty run-ins 4-2.Gareth Grundie's side trailed to an early goal by Emelia Surridge but dominated possession for much of the game.Their pressure told when Katie Mullan scored a deserved equaliser with just under four minutes remaining.Mikayla Power and Sarah Hawkshaw scored in the shootout to level it at 2-2 after three attempts for each side but after the Kiwis edged ahead, Michelle Carey hit the outside of the post before Hannah Cotter beat Ireland keeper Ayeisha McFerran to win the tournament.The defeat is a setback for Ireland as it denied them a place in the FIH Pro League next season, which would have been perfect preparation for the 2026 World Cup.They will remain in the second tier of world hockey for another year and switch their focus to the EuroHockey Championships in August and qualifying for the World Cup.
"It's disappointing to lose in the shoot-out," coach Grundie said after the final."I think we played quite well throughout the game and we had a lot more chances that we weren't able to convert and it comes down to lottery of 1 v 1's, we came off second.'We'll learn from it and move on to the next one. It was a really positive tournament. We'll take some time out and then work towards the Europeans later this summer and we have a World Cup to qualify for."
Penalty heartache once again - analysis
For almost a decade the rollercoaster ride taken by the Ireland women's hockey team has been intertwined with shootouts.From missing out on 2016 and 2024 Olympic qualification to winning shootouts in the quarter and semi-finals of the 2018 World Cup and making their first Olympics Games in Tokyo in 2021.So perhaps it shouldn't have come as any surprise that this final would end up the way it did.Ireland had produced some superb attacking hockey in winning their four games on route to the final, including a 1-0 win over New Zealand in the pool stages.However once Surridge's reverse stick shot beat an unsighted McFerran in the sixth minute, Ireland were chasing the game.Not that there was any panic. The hard work put in by Grundie in his first few months in charge of the squad was clear to see.Ireland began to build momentum and by the end of the third quarter had forced five penalty corners but converted none.In fact penalty corner routines were poor with only one of 25 scored in the five games, a statistic that Ireland will need to work on moving forward.In the final quarter, Ireland bombarded the New Zealanders. Power's shot went just wide and from a corner Hawkshaw was inches away.Once again on the big occasion it was Ireland's most experienced player who stepped up.Mullan twisted in the circle and fired the equaliser into the New Zealand net with 3:57 remaining in the game. Even then Ireland came close to winning it, New Zealand had nothing left, except the sanctuary of a shootout in which they'd had practice the day before by beating Chile in the semi-final.They held their nerve and it was just enough to end Irish dreams in the cruellest way possible, and not for the first time.

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Belfast Telegraph
21 minutes ago
- Belfast Telegraph
Michael O'Neill ready for NI's next generation to take another step against old foes Denmark
They have largely continued to fly high since, with the ultimate aim to soar all the way to America, Canada and Mexico for next year's World Cup Finals. The latest stop on the journey sees O'Neill's young guns come face to face with Denmark again – on Saturday evening – this time in Copenhagen at Parken. Prior to beating the Danes 2-0 in Belfast in the last game of the Euro 2024 qualifiers, Northern Ireland had suffered a disappointing campaign. Goals from Isaac Price and Dion Charles provided the Green and White Army with hope that all was not lost and since then that optimism has grown with further impressive results and performances plus success in winning a Nations League group. Exciting players like Price, Conor Bradley, Trai Hume, Shea Charles, Pierce Charles and Brodie Spencer have Northern Ireland fans daring to dream again that under O'Neill's management another major tournament is a distinct possibility. The match with Denmark will be the third of four warm-up games this year – with Iceland at Windsor Park on Tuesday – for the World Cup qualifiers which start in September with a double header away to Luxembourg and Germany. In the previous two friendlies in March, Northern Ireland drew 1-1 at home to Switzerland and, weakened by injuries, were ripped apart in Sweden in a 5-1 loss. Given the strength of the Danish side, the game in Copenhagen promises to be a tough test too, though having the likes of Bradley, Hume and Daniel Ballard available for this Scandinavian challenge will help. On what he is expecting, O'Neill said: 'Any nation when they play at home wants to put on a show. You can see in the squad that Denmark have picked they are obviously taking the game very seriously. 'They have players that play in the top leagues and players who are trying to establish themselves in this squad. They will be keen to show they are ready to start big games. 'This is as tough a test as we can expect to get. I felt this game was as close as we could get to possibly playing Germany in September away. That game is in Cologne which is a very similar stadium so it will give us the best preparation possible.' Asked if he was fearful of the game being as difficult as the one in Sweden, O'Neill stated: 'There's no point playing teams you will beat all the time. You won't get any better if you do that. 'We are a Pot 3 team, so if we are going to qualify for a tournament we will have to get results that people don't expect and we have to find a way to deal with teams in Pot 1, which Denmark have consistently been. The result is always important but this is preparation for September. 'We talked about the Sweden game and we were very young on the night and the result was a little bit harsh on us, but that is what international football can do. It can be harsh on you. The important thing is if we go through difficult moments against Denmark we are able to stay in the game and find a way back into the game.' Reflecting on the last match with the Danes, which was a launchpad for his youthful side, O'Neill declared: 'We came off a bad, a disappointing result in Finland (a 4-0 defeat) and the most important thing was we got a good reaction. 'It was a very disciplined performance that came with two very good goals. We counter-attacked extremely well and limited Denmark to very few opportunities in the game. 'They maybe look at the game and say that they had already qualified (for Euro 2024) at that point in time, but for us it was about taking a step forward and that's what we managed to do. 'We took that step forward into the games in March (2024 drawing in Romania and winning in Scotland) and subsequently into the Nations League. 'It was an important game for us because it did set a trigger a confidence in a group of players that, until that point, hadn't won a lot of games at international level. 'Subsequently, I think in the last 13 international games we've been beaten by Spain, Sweden and Bulgaria all away from home. 'There's been a lot of progression, a lot of learnings in that period from the group of players. 'But we've still got a long way to go. The time to judge an international footballer really in terms of the level that you get to is probably 24-25. 'Some players don't even get the opportunity to play international football until they're 24-25. By the time this group of players hits that age group, I'm hoping that if the progression continues, we'll have an experienced team that will come here even better prepared than we will be on Saturday night.' Out of the 26 players originally selected for the June internationals, only Paddy McNair is out after picking up an injury in the four day Marbella training camp. It means the only player in his 30s left in the squad is George Saville. O'Neill added: 'It's a friendly game. They've got nothing to fear from this type of game and we'll have to go and play. I think that this is a good opportunity for our players.'


Scottish Sun
32 minutes ago
- Scottish Sun
England stars are physically and mentally cream-crackered – surely life is too short for these Andorra and Senegal games
England will have to face Andorra again at the start of next season SLEEPING LIONS England stars are physically and mentally cream-crackered – surely life is too short for these Andorra and Senegal games Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) WHY do we need to put ourselves through this again? Why do England have to play Andorra at football, when the basic point of sitting down to watch any football match is to think: 'I wonder who's going to win this one'. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 4 Thomas Tuchel's England squad play Andorra in a World Cup qualifier on Saturday Credit: Getty We already know that England will win. We know that Andorra are extremely unlikely to score. And it would be a significant surprise if Jordan Pickford has to make a single meaningful save. Surely your life is too short to tune in at 5pm on Saturday and watch this thing happen. This isn't English arrogance. It's not jingoistic or tub-thumping to point out that Andorra has a population of 80,000 - making it slightly bigger than the town of Bracknell but smaller than Weston-Super-Mare. READ MORE IN FOOTBALL 'MISSED BY ALL' Heartbreak for England legend as wife dies after months battling illness And therefore, England, with its 57 million people, will always beat it in a football match. Andorra is a lovely place in the Pyrenees, it's good for skiing and the Andorrans are rightly proud of their tiny nation state. Not that they currently have a football stadium suitable to hold this World Cup qualifier, which is instead being staged at Espanyol's home ground in Barcelona. But with players burnt-out, the calendar congested with fixtures and with a month-long Club World Cup about to start, does anyone need this thing - Andorra versus England - to be part of our lives? 4 England breezed past Andorra 4-0 in 2021 Credit: Getty CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS Over the past 19 years, England have played Andorra six times and beaten them 5-0, 3-0, 2-0, 6-0, 4-0 and 5-0. The 3-0 in Barcelona was vaguely memorable because Steve McClaren, probably the silliest man ever to manage England, had a hissy fit and stormed out of the post-match press conference. England star Ivan Toney hits back at Bruno Fernandes with blunt reply after Man Utd star's Saudi transfer snub But, despite being at the majority of those matches, I can't remember a single thing about any of the rest of them. So 4-0 to England will be roughly par, even though pretty much everyone will then say that 4-0 is not enough. There can be a certain sadistic pleasure in witnessing an absolute hiding - a nine or a ten - but that's almost certainly not going to happen either. It is not that difficult for 11 fit young blokes of lower-tier EFL standard - which is Andorra's level - to sit behind the ball in a packed defence, block shots for 90 minutes and keep the score down, especially if they are showing zero ambition of actually scoring. In almost 30 years as a recognised international football team, Andorra have never lost by more than 7-0. They aren't that bad. In the past five years, they have beaten fellow minnows San Marino, Liechtenstein, St Kitts & Nevis and Grenada. Before that, Andorra defeated Moldova, Macedonia, Albania and Belarus - as well as their one genuine stand-out result, a 1-0 win over Hungary in 2017. The Nations League has been excellent for smaller nations, giving them regular competitive football against countries of a similar size and teams of similar ability. Andorra and other postage-stamp nations should not be entirely barred from World Cup qualifying - a pre-qualifying tournament, or Nations League results, could determine that one of them reaches the actual qualifying rounds. But surely something has to give in the fixture schedule. And if you're looking for a place to start when cutting fixtures, then how about fixtures that nobody wants to watch and nobody wants to play in? England's footballers are tired. Very wealthy, yes, but also physically and mentally cream-crackered. They don't need to spend ten days of their lives preparing to play Andorra and then Senegal - who are, admittedly, half-decent - in a match at Nottingham next Tuesday which will mean absolutely nothing. I sincerely hope that you have something better to do at 5pm on Saturday than watching this match. And also that you have something better to do on September 6, when, just three months from now, England will play Andorra yet again. At some point, we will all reach our deathbeds. And, please believe me, none of us will ever find ourselves staring into that ultimate abyss, wishing that we had spent more of our time watching England play Andorra at football. 4 England's players are knackered after a long season Credit: Getty


Wales Online
39 minutes ago
- Wales Online
Wales v Liechtenstein Live: Kick-off time, TV channel and score updates
Wales face Liechtenstein this evening in a crucial World Cup qualifying match. Craig Bellamy's charges welcome their central European opponents to Cardiff City Stadium, with the home side currently on four points and in second place in Group J. Despite not taking anything for granted, Bellamy and Co will have no doubt circled this fixture as a great opportunity to bag three points, especially with a tough away trip to Belgium coming up on Monday. Four players - Daniel James, Oli Cooper, Charlie Crew and Ronan Kpakio - have already been left out of tonight's matchdaty 23 for the fixture, with Leeds United man James suffering from illness earlier in the week. One suspects Bellamy will go as strong as he can tonight and judging by his pre-match comments, he won't be underestimating his opponents this evening. The match is being shown live on BBC1 Wales and you can also follow live updates in our blow below. Kick-off is at 7.45pm. Scroll down for live updates