The last time we played in a major tournament in Japan and Korea in 2002, we drew with Germany and Spain, outplaying both sides for long periods in those games, making our way to within a shoot-out of the top eight in world football. This was achieved despite the small matter of a disagreement in the training camp, which threatened to slightly destabilise the collective effort. :bashful: I was just thinking - how does this summer's likely starting line-up compare to the class of 2002?
1: Given vs. Given. Evens.
2: Finnan vs. O'Shea. Adv. 2002.
3. Harte vs. Ward. Evens. Harte wins out on set pieces and passing, Ward is quicker and a better tackler. Both are suspect defensively.
4: Staunton vs. Dunne. Adv. 2012. Comparing the 'senior partners' of both defences, Dunne is miles ahead of Staunton, who I feel was fortunate to get in ahead of Cunningham for the tournament.
5: Breen vs. St. Ledger. Evens. Breen had more experience at the top level than Sledge, who still hasnt played a first-tier game at club level. However, St. Ledger hasn't dropped as many clangers in a green shirt as Breen had before that World Cup.
6/8: Holland/Kinsella vs Whelan/Andrews. All four players cut from the same cloth - all late developers, all tidy enough, but all quite limited. Adv. 2002, but there were many games before and after 2002 when the Holland/Kinsella partnership looked like our current pair - two Robins with no Batman.
7: Gary Kelly vs. Damien Duff. Adv. 2012. Duff may be aging, but he offers much more in the final third than an out-of-position Kelly ever did.
11: Kevn Kilbane vs. Aiden McGeady. Adv. 2012. Both players known for giving the ball away repeatedly, but McGeady has more about him.
9: Damien Duff vs. Shane Long/Kevin Doyle/Jon Walters. Adv. 2012. Duff has never been a striker, and his best form in that World Cup came when he moved out to the wing.
10: Robbie Keane vs. Robbie Keane. Evens. May have lost a little pace, but he's a bit more clever now.
Absentees due to general, varying degrees of Corkonian insanity: Roy Keane vs. Stephen Ireland. Adv. 2002. A world-class player, one of the best in the world in his position, at the height of his power, who actually came back to play for Ireland - despite medical advice - a few years later... versus a luxury player who plays the odd game for Villa, and plays well when he could be bothered.
Thoughts?