Wednesday night’s match against Portugal was the first time in history that Ireland fielded a team entirely made up of players playing top flight football in England in a home international
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Wednesday night’s match against Portugal was the first time in history that Ireland fielded a team entirely made up of players playing top flight football in England in a home international
interesting, do you think this is an indication of a higher standard of squad members?
possibly. all the players who started are regulars for their clubs and its great that we don't HAVE to start first div players anymore. it gives off a more professional and respectable view of the team i believe
France 0-0 Ireland (WC Qualifiers) 09/10/04
Rep of Ireland: Given, Carr, O'Brien, Cunningham, O'Shea, Finnan, Roy Keane, Kilbane, Duff, Robbie Keane, Morrison.
/edit - Didn't see the home bit. :)
:cool:Quote:
Originally Posted by martin_rules_ie
beat me too it!! ;)Quote:
Originally Posted by eirebhoy
Only 3 of them were Plastic Paddy's. ;)
Wonder what the lowest number of PP's we've had in an International starting XI is?
Have to go back to the mid to late 70s and a game with Switzerland for the last time the starting XI for Ireland were all born in the country...
That's what I was thinking alright because I remember many players from the 80's and the number of PP's grew dramatically during that period.Quote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
BTW, before I get lambasted about having a go at PP's, I wouldn't have a squad without KK and AO'B.
CM didn't impress against Portugal but he's welcome in my squad too.
How about a plastic Paddies V real Paddies match?
I expect there woud be crowd trouble though :D
Technically the apostrophy in Paddy's is incorrect, the same goes forQuote:
Originally Posted by Peadar
PP's.
Its plural, it does not donate possession or missing letter's ;) ;)
What all the Kavanagh & Breen supporters will be up in arms!!!Quote:
Originally Posted by martin_rules_ie
intrestingly enough last night......Wenger was the first english club manager to name a 16-man squad that included not one British player!
........and they won 5-1!!!!!!!!!!
what does that say????
Actually Chelsea did that a few years ago. Last night was the first time Arsenal did it.Quote:
Originally Posted by wws
I think Chelsea had Jodi Morris and one other British player (Nichol or someone?) in the 16 man squad (ie on the bench) that time.
Jody Morris, Jon Harley, John Terry and Mark Nicholls were all on the bench.Quote:
Originally Posted by cfdh_edmundo
The game was v Southampton in 1999
Chelsea had 11 foreigners, don't think they had 5 foreigners on the bench.Quote:
Originally Posted by Metrostars
How ironic though that UEFA are worried that clubs are only buying foreign players yet there were 5 Chelsea players on the pitch at the same time for England last year. Abramovich's money seems to be doing the opposite to what UEFA think. :)
Now Im not CM's biggest fan in ayway shape or form. However, thought he played quite well last Weds and had a far better game than Keane (though that wasn't difficult)Quote:
Originally Posted by Peadar
In reverse, Spurs played 6 Brits + 2 Irish in their starting 11 versus WBA at the weekend!!Quote:
Originally Posted by Metrostars
by Irish, dont you mean "west brits"?
I posted this in another thread earlier on but here's a quote from some bloke on Sky News on the topic of Arsenal fielding all foreign players:Quote:
Originally Posted by wws
"Chelsea have a hardcore of English players, Frank Lampard, John Terry, or British players, Damien Duff."
In fact it was on 5-live that I heard about Spurs. The commentator said "8 british players in the starting 11" as well.Quote:
Originally Posted by eirebhoy
I was happy not to make the same error! :D
That it isn't that long since the five subs rule was introduced?Quote:
Originally Posted by wws
First English team to play a team with no English players...Liverpool in the 80s - the likes of Grobbelaar, Hansen, Hysen, Molby, Whelan, Aldridge, Johnson, Rush, Houghton, Gillespie...
Though possibly some team way back in the 1880s had a team full of Scots?
Not such a new phenomenon (I know we're going to non-English speakers now, but still)
I think Liverpool won the cup with the least amount of English-born players - just Lawrenson, but I'm not sure of the year. Barnes would have been in the side, so it wasn't entirely non-English internationals.Quote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
If I recall rightly, didn't Queen's Park win the English FA Cup twice in the 1880s, and Cardiff in 1927? Any locally based members of the forum want to check it out?Quote:
Originally Posted by pineapple stu
Queen's Park twice reached the FA Cup final but lost on both occassions, Cardiff did indeed win in '27.Quote:
Originally Posted by Bluebeard
Queen's Park reached the first two semis, but never got to the final. They only ever played one game in the FA Cup too! And it finished 0-0!Quote:
Originally Posted by 1MickCollins
Cardiff won he FA Cup in 1927 - 1-0 v. Arsenal (I think). Winning goal was a penalty which squirmed into the net off the keeper's newly cleaned and slippy jersey! Apparently the scorer was the only person in the ground who didn't see what happened! Think Cardiff lost out on the league title on goal average that year too...
KK?Quote:
Originally Posted by Peadar
king kenny? from dublin?
Quote:
Originally Posted by dynamo kerry
No, Zinedine Kilbane from Preston, Lancs.
BTW, "King Kenny" is KC, Kenny Cunningham. :rolleyes:
The Greeks and the Romans were the only ancient people I studied in history, Dav. :DQuote:
Originally Posted by davros
Quote:
Originally Posted by Peadar
I know who king kenny is
I'd forgotten about skilbane.
I wish I could continue to forget about him.