Posts Tagged ‘ Nicosia ’

A Change Won’t Do Us Good

Ireland lurched to a 3-0 defeat against Australia earlier this month

Ireland lurched to a 3-0 defeat against Australia earlier this month

The temptation to dismiss friendlies as meaningless dress rehearsals is always keener after defeat. That Giovanni Trapattoni saw fit to announce an unchanged squad from the one that flapped gormlessly to a 3-0 humbling by Australia a fortnight ago should not have come as a surprise. With the exception of the clubless Liam Miller, whose persistent selection continues to mystify, the only positions which might have benefited from a change in personnel remain as they are due to circumstances beyond the manager’s control. Dean Kiely’s  pre-friendly tantrum sealed his own fate and while the West Brom ‘keeper offers plenty in terms of ability as well as the great unquantifiables of experience and ‘dressingroom character’, he is sadly – and, at 38, terminally – consigned to the international wilderness. Joe Murphy retains his place in his stead.

Steve Finnan’s move to Portsmouth in the close season raised hopes of a return to fitness after an injury-addled year at Espanyol. However, a strained hamstring has ruled the former Liverpool man out until the end of this month, meaning that while the Cyprus match has come too soon for the right-back, a return to the fold for the crucial home qualifiers against Italy and Montenegro is very much still on the cards. And while the contrite Joey O’Brien continues to be denied his chance at international redemption after his fit of pique last year, the injury to Paul McShane means Kevin Foley and Stephen Kelly support John O’Shea as options at right-back.

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Attitude of Irish stars a graver ill than Gaffer’s gaffes


Stan Marino

Stan Marino

Whatever about the vitriol expended on his managerial record, there persists a substantial amount of good feeling towards Steve Staunton. A loyal servant to the green jersey and grizzled campaigner, in a way you could half understand the FAI’s leap to embrace him as talisman in their hour of need, a souvenir of better times now past. “The memory be green“, quoth the bard. Indeed, the bizarre thing is that it all has a touch of the Hamlets about it. A tragic hero thrust into the limelight before his time, political skullduggery dispatching his elder, inconvenient predecessor. His playing boots still warm, traded in for loafers coldly furnishing forth the press-conference table. An ailing Polonius by his side, to whom he must lend his ear but not his voice. Rumblings of war and tension reverberate about the court. An increasingly fraught relationship with Ophelia, his public, an innocent weaned on expectation, steadily driven to distraction as her man’s soliloquys become increasingly detached from reality. San Marino were always going to be a handful. You can’t legislate for mistakes. There is nothing you can do. Words, words, words. Continue reading