Just the odd quick look at Ryan Manning there with the beard and his size ( not so much his style of play ) reminded me of the Great Tony Grealish. What a Great Player Tony Grealish was for us.
Just the odd quick look at Ryan Manning there with the beard and his size ( not so much his style of play ) reminded me of the Great Tony Grealish. What a Great Player Tony Grealish was for us.
Indeed he was. Thought I was the only person here old enough to remember him playing. Pity Jack turned out to be such a disappointment. Somehow when he first emerged I wondered whether Tony was his old man in the same way I thought Eddie might be David's father.
My concern is that Keane will be discarded on the basis of this messy game. He'll probably be in the Championship next season, the standard of many in the squad. He's our only prolific club scorer and if it continues at that level he should be a factor.
we absolutely cannot discard him and i don't think SK will.
the tempo of the first 60 mins was very slow, crosses were coming in from way too deep and I am not sure he received a decent pass anywhere near the box all night. it would be very unfair to judge him on last tuesdays game which was after all only his first start
He started out at Orient before Giles brought him to West Brom along with Irish internationals Mick Martin, Paddy Mulligan and Ray Treacy. Treacy started his career at West Brom but only played a couple of games before being sold. He scored a couple of goals in his first few games after Giles signed him ten years after he left. He jokingly said he was due a testimonial as he was averaging a goal a game for the Baggies over a 10 year period.
He wouldnt be the first fella to look poor on his 1st start and go on to do better. I thought that he looked like a L1 player the other day, but I think I said after the game that because of his goal record this season hes probably worth another look. I dont think he'll ever be 1st choice for us but hes a better player than James Collins to have as back up
[QUOTE=third policeman;2106840]He started out at Orient before Giles brought him to West Brom along with Irish internationals Mick Martin, Paddy Mulligan and Ray Treacy. Treacy started his career at West Brom but only played a couple of games before being sold. He scored a couple of goals in his first few games after Giles signed him ten years after he left. He jokingly said he was due a testimonial as he was averaging a goal a game for the Baggies over a 10 year period.[/QUOTE
Memory playing tricks there. He went to West Brom after Giles moved on.
Im not sure the lead striker is his best position? Thought he was better when he came on against Belgium than he was leading the line. He has plenty of time anyway. Can't be writing off anyone after a bad performance or two. We aren't spoiled for choice. Up front and in midfield anyways. Embarrassing riches further back of course.
[QUOTE=TonyD;2106878]Both good players but very different. Conroy was slight and essentially a winger while Treacy a rugged and aggressive striker. He was used as a foil up front alongside Don Givens. Conroy was definitely more skilful and elusive - he went round defenders, Treacy through them. A good touchstone for the era was Ireland's famous 3-0 defeat of USSR at Dalymount in 1974 in a European Nations qualifier where Treacy did the spadework for a Givens hat-trick and 18-year-old Liam Brady made a sensational debut. Conroy didn't play (maybe unplayed 12th man, maybe injured as unfortunately he often was), but it would hardly be a surprise that Giles preferred the no-holds-barred Treacy.
Ireland line-up: Paddy Roche, Jimmy Holmes, Paddy Mulligan, Terry Mancini, Joe Kinnear, Liam Brady, John Giles, Steve Heighway, Mick Martin, Don Givens, Ray Treacy.