The whole conversation has reminded me of that FEAR - LOVE scene in Donnie Darko! Like Donnie, I don't think it's that simple...
I just find this 'playing with fear' thing a bit hard to buy in to. For me, this is a term aimed at teams who are suffocated by the overwhelming pressure placed on them to succeed by the media and general public. Think Brazil 2014, Real Madrid or England at every major tournament. I just don't see that with our guys. There seems to be a happy, relaxed mood in the camp and they have showed great spirit on the pitch to dig out results, when it would have been a lot easier to give into the 'fear', had it actually existed. I think there's a difference between playing without confidence and playing with fear. We don't have many players who are genuinely confident on the ball. It stands to reason they won't want to receive it in tight quarters. I think it's overly dramatic to call this 'playing with fear' when, in most cases, it's just knowing their limitations. Yourself and Stutts seem to mean two different things anyway when talking about this dreaded fear, your version seems to be related to the pressure of qualifying while Stutts seems to be talking about the courage to get on the ball and make something happen. I'm not even sure who I'm replying to anymore.
The only possible exception to this is James McCarthy really. I say this because he quite clearly has the ability to do more, as in receive the ball in tight areas and I'm in full agreement with Stutts that he should be demanding possession and being generally more constructive. He is the same at club level though, so it's not just an Ireland thing. He's a fan favourite at Everton for his industry, not for his ability to control games from midfield. It's becoming a bit of a worry but I wouldn't lose hope for him. In the past year he's definitely developed more personality on the pitch, he's more aggressive and is getting involved in more heated exchanges all the time. In a strange way I think this is progress to some degree, he's making his presence felt and is definitely less timid than he once was. Now he really needs to start showing the same sort of attitude when it comes to possession of the football.
It's a hard one to figure out, is it possibly from years of performing the same important, but unexpansive, role under Martinez? He was always the guy to cover for his fellow midfielders, keep it simple and give it to somebody else to create. In the deeper role not losing possession is paramount, playing the ball to your full back or the guy two feet away is perfectly acceptable. It's only in the last couple of months that Martinez has started to use him in a more advanced role at times, or at least with a licence to venture further forward. Hopefully this will be the next stage of his development and he'll start to take more risks.
I don't think it's like-for-like comparing our current predicament to when Mick McCarthy took over. Back then, some of our greatest players of all time had retired en masse and there was very little choice but to blood new players. O'Neill has inherited a different sort of squad I think, the players that need replacing can be done from within for the most part. To take the average age of our team on Saturday (29) as a representation of where we're actually at would be a bit misleading I feel. For a start, nearly everybody bar Martin, unfortunately, would have started Westwood and Long ahead of Given and Murphy. That, in itself, would have reduced the average age considerably. Most of the players in the dangerous 30+ category are the very ones whose place in the team is questionable anyway, bar O'Shea and Hoolahan. I wouldn't have any major concerns about trying to replace the remaining two, Whelan and Walters. We have plenty of options in the current squad to cope without them.
The way I see it, the transitional period really started after the Euros, when Trap was forced to integrate the likes of Coleman, Wilson, McCarthy, Hendrick, McClean, etc. A lot of O'Neill's job was done for him in that sense, he just needed to come in, instill confidence and set them up to play in a way that would suit them best. This hasn't really happened, certainly with no consistency both in terms of performance level or the shape of the team. OwlsFan is right to point out that it is still pretty early days though, in terms of competitive fixtures.
I know you explained the context of what was meant by 'writing off campaigns' but I still can't really agree with it. We've a team of mainly PL based players, why should they, or management, be given a licence to fail? If they're not good enough they're not good enough but they shouldn't be afforded the luxury of an excuse. I know some people may have felt Roy Keane has been over the top in his attitude towards a winning mentality in the past, but it's certainly a better psychology than an acceptance of failure. Northern Ireland, Wales and Scotland had hit rock bottom so maybe that was liberating for them in a sense, but I don't think we're there yet and hopefully won't get to find out. It's pretty obvious we have the bulk of our best players in the squad as it is, I don't think the scale of experimentation needed is as colossal as is being suggested, not necessarily by you. The priority should be to get the guys that we have to perform better.
Last edited by DeLorean; 17/06/2015 at 11:58 AM.
He was taken off (injured) in Germany and we had considerably more of the ball, granted it was probably more down to the circumstances than Whelan going off, but it showed it can be done without our little maestro.
I think we'd lost our way on Saturday long before he went off too.
Well for a long time after Whelan went off we didn't have more of the ball. That came after the goal when we had an extra midfielder on. But regardless of any particular game, I feel we lose something when he's not there that we need and can't replace with the players we have. He's not just a workhorse in my opinion - he has a range of passing only Gibson betters.
How many full games does Wes play? Doesn't he most times/always get replaced when playing for his club in the championship?
Most probably he won't cut it at this level for much longer.
Even Rosicky, a really fit and superb athlete, is starting to look off the pace now at 34.
Wilson made a very bad mistake in the first half but the team were alert and recovered the situation.
The single biggest mistake in that whole game was our attitude on the pitch at the start of the 2nd half, we were dozy and looked dozy, I smelled the doziness.
That was just intolerable and totally unacceptable at this level. How did all that happen? that's the stuff of public enquiries, inquisitions, witch hunts and lynch mobs.
And a boll0xed Wes contributed to the goal against Poland.
From http://irish-abroad.appspot.com/MonthlyStats?month=14
Of the 31 games he started this season for Norwich, he completed...three. 3-1 win over Blackburn, 1-1 with Bournemouth and 1-1 with Derby. All at home.
No other player had more than 20 substitutions (Simon Cox had 20).
You've raised my pop culture reference there, very nice. Some good points there DeLorean, fair play. I'll try and keep this short since I've already way TLR'd over this whole thing and can't elaborate too much more on my point (and there's a fair amount of agree-to-disagree here). But I will dispute a couple of things, of course.
![]()
There is a difference here - the team has great spirit and bravery. I'd say most of them would take a punch in the gut to get a result. But that's not the same as having the composure and courage to get on the ball and play it when they can.
In the last ten minutes, it doesn't take much courage to lump it long. It takes real courage to play with cohesive, fearlessness for the previous 80 and keep the pressure on opponents when they're got em cornered.
In fairness, I've written quite a bit about courage to get on the ball across my posts, particularly talking about McCarthy, Coleman and McGeady to varying degrees.
These are the players who can play make a difference, but they're choking consistently in big occasions. But I think it goes beyond individuals because this has been a chronic failing of our play for some years. Which is why I've talked about our fear to get on the ball and play as a corollary of the pressure our team appears to be under campaign after campaign.
There's a few others for me, but for sure he'd be one of the main ones. It sounds like I think he can be more expressive than you can.
Of course, it's not like-for-like but I think it's an interesting example of where we could go when there's an acceptance that qualifcation is an unrealistic goal - or at least not the be all and end all.
We need long-term thinking to overcome what I see as game-to-game underachievement.
You make good points about O'Neill's squad - no disputing that, his squad is as good as it gets personnel wise. So we need to do more to maximise what we can do, to get them playing better.
A licence to fail is an extreme - and to be honest, a fairly skewed label. If the goal is to improve the overall fortunes of the national team - its psyche, its confidence, its boldness - then it could only be seen as a failure if that doesn't come off long-term.
It's realistic, not defeatist, to say we're not going to make Russia. We're fourth seeds. Fourth seeds almost never make World Cups. I hope we give it a lash - and I would expect not to be let down in terms of commitment and application. But I would trade off an unsuccessful campaign for a 90 minutes or two in which we overpowered and outplayed decent opposition. Realistically, we've hardly ever done that over the last decade.
I'm not saying we're going to start dominating teams regularly after a couple of campaigns in the doldrums. I'm just saying that we're a team who chronically can't win, who look unconfident and jittery on the ball and revert to route one type in an emergency and a less-pressured campaign could help rectify that long-term.
Maybe that sounds defeatist to you, but I just don't see it that way. None of that accepts defeat. It just potentially trades it off for somegrowth as a team. How does that go against a winning mentality?
To be fair, our current mentality isn't winning any matches anyway.
For me, I think you can strike a balance between trying to win every game (which of course you would be) but also trying to developing some pattern of play which you can take forward into future campaigns. If we lay the groundwork, stop shirking the ball and develop that style, then we will win matches.
Last edited by SwanVsDalton; 17/06/2015 at 5:31 PM.
Ou-est le Centre George Pompidou?
It all depends on whcih Germany turn up on the day, ie the invincible one or the dodgy one and against whom they turn up against.
In reality almost anything could happen in the 'big games', if anyone of the big 3 have a bad run in it open the door for
us provided were don't trip one the door step and fall flat on our faces.
I'm clutching at straws, but I hope Wes is a Lubo Moravcik. What a player and still good at what, 35?
Rosicky is more direct, all-action. Good player but his greatest strength is his dynamism. Wes' strengths are less dependent on athleticism. What age is Xavi? 35 also?
I'd guess Wes has one more campaign. Then we can pick at 32 year old Stephen Ireland![]()
I think Wessi's enthusiasm due to his lack of mileage at international level will stand to him also.
Current Group D Standings:
POL 14
GER 13
SCO 11
IRE 9
GEO 3
GIB 0
Matches:
Sep 4:
GEO-SCO
GER-POL
GIB-IRE
Sep 7:
POL-GIB
IRE-GEO
SCO-GER
Oct 8:
GEO-GIB
IRE-GER
SCO-POL
Oct 11
GER-GEO
GIB-SCO
POL-IRE
My guess after the September games it will look like this:
GER 19
POL 17
IRE 15
SCO 14
GEO 3
GIB 0
GER might be satisfied with a point to qualify when they come to Dublin in Oct. So the last table could look like this:
GER 23
POL 19
SCO 18
IRE 17
GEO 3
GIB 0
That doesn't look good. It's going to come down to how we do in those two October matches. We will need at least win one of them.
"Jacques Santini...will be greeted in every dugout of the country by "one-nil, one-nil" - Clive Tyldsley, 89th minute of France-England June 13, 2004.
"Ooooohhhh Nooooooo" Bobby Robson 91st minute.
Blog on Scotland game and latest Delaney FAI shenigans. Forgive any typos, no time to proof read tonight.
http://afalsefirstxi.blogspot.ie/201...ocks-down.html
Last edited by Drumcondra 69er; 17/06/2015 at 8:29 PM.
Irish Football Blog - A False First XI - http://afalsefirstxi.blogspot.ie/
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Hard to argue with the basic thrust of this argument, but Maloney the most eye-catching player in midfield on Saturday? I only saw him once in the entire game.
http://www.theguardian.com/football/...talking-points
3) Republic look out of date compared to Scotland
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At the end of the 19th century “the Scottish style” meant something very specific: passing football, combination play, teamwork, as showcased for admiring crowds by the “Scotch Professors” in the first ever series of international matches against England. Ireland and Scotland’s 1-1 draw at the Aviva Stadium on Saturday was a messy game but a decent result for the Scots, who have looked throughout the campaign the more accomplished of the two teams. Shaun Maloney, James Morrison, Steven Naismith and Scott Brown may not be quite professor-level just yet. But even in a scruffy game there was confirmation in Dublin that Gordon Strachan – who is himself approaching national treasure status – has assembled a team that might not ever threaten to reach the final stages of Euro 2016 but which would at least look it was playing the same game as the best teams there.
Against Ireland Scotland passed the ball well enough, crafted some nice triangles on the flanks and generally looked most comfortable playing a technically sound pass-and-move game. Should they fail to qualify from here they will do so in the knowledge that they have at least been pushing in the right direction, whereas much of the gloom around Ireland’s current trajectory is a sense that the basic method is simply a little out of date. Maloney was the most eye-catching player in midfield on Saturday, scorer now of five goals in qualifying and a fine all-round playmaking presence. Scotland may be two or three really good players (at least one of them a high class striker) away from being a top quality team. But Maloney and his fellow ball-playing midfielders would certainly add to the gaiety of a major tournament. Even in the fury of Dublin the glimpses in this qualifying campaign of a more historically Scottish Style have been a pleasure to watch.Barney Ronay
These are the main differences between where we stand I think.
That's true, I meant a licence to fail short-term for the overall good, I just don't think it's necessary. We're not that far off, we're not beating our direct rivals but we are pretty close to it. It wouldn't take a massive improvement to get over the line against them and therefore over the line in terms of qualifying. Radical changes may be needed, no doubt the probably are, behind the scenes at grass roots, etc. but I think subtle changes could lead to better results with our current senior team. The pressing in the first half was excellent on Saturday but it didn't have to go hand-in-hand with a long ball game plan. If we could retain the former and either dispose or reduce the latter it would be a good start I think.
You're probably right stats-wise, and maybe I'm just fooling myself, but I don't really see it that way. It depends on the group we get obviously but, as I've said above, I think we're at least very competitive against our direct rivals, basically seeds 2-4 depending on what the draw throws up, obviously I wouldn't be backing us to out-point Italy. There are huge question marks also... Will MON be a campaign wiser and maybe have stumbled across something that works by then? Will the likes of McCarthy and Hendrick kick on? Maybe a rejuvenated injury free Gibson would make a difference to our ball retention ability? Maybe Clark could free up Brady to play on the left wing? I just think we have a lot going for us if we can start really believing in ourselves and obviously management is crucial. I agree that things can't go on as they are, something will have to happen at some stage but at least MON is trying different things and a lot of the things the public were demanding. I'm willing to give it time but it could get worse before it gets better, if it gets better!
Is O'Neill's contract up at the end of this campaign anyway though? A fourth place finish wouldn't put him in the best bargaining position, if he even wants to stay on.
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