Posts Tagged ‘ St Patrick’s Athletic ’

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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Nearly Men, Yet Again

Champions League, 2nd Qualifying Round – 22nd July 2009

Bohemians: 0

Red Bull Salzburg: 1 (Jezek, 87)

(Red Bull win 2-1 on aggregate)

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Joseph Ndo battles beatshis marker against Red Bull Salzburg

Joseph Ndo beats his marker against Red Bull Salzburg

So near, so far, so very League of Ireland.  Bohemians came within three minutes of becoming only the second Irish club side to reach the final qualifying stage of the Champions League on Wednesday night, producing a hard-working and tactically astute performance that was cruelly undone by a late defensive lapse. In Jason Byrne, Glen Crowe and Cameroon’s Joseph Ndo, Bohs were able to boast three players with international experience as well as one who must be close to a first cap in Brian Murphy (watched from the stands by Ireland goalkeeping coach Alan Kelly), yet once again the best and brightest the League had to offer came up agonisingly short. Not since Shelbourne clashed with Deportivo in 2004 has an Irish side made it to the brink of the Champions League proper, although wins in recent years over the likes of NEC Nijmegen and Malmo, as well as draws against Dynamo Kyiv and Hertha Berlin, have counted as highlights amongst an otherwise queasy assortment of reversals.

Results like Wednesday’s tend to elicit reactions of either patronising head-patting (“sure isn’t it great to even get this far”) or bleakest despair (“thus far shall we go, and no further”). Each is understandable in its own right – yes, sandwiched between the twin titans of the GAA and the English Premiership, the dogged persistence of a functioning Irish club scene is an achievement in itself – and yes,  Irish clubs, with their  yo-yo finances and ill-advised patterns of investment, are often their own worst enemies. And yet recent history has shown small but significant steps towards progress that belie such fatalism. Continue reading