Just as an aside - When Molumby was playing with the U-17s and U-19s (Both for Brighton and Ireland) there was many a game where he was pinging the ball around the pitch like Liam Brady - I think the loans at Millwall and Preston ruined him because they both wanted a box-to-box midfielder who could cover the ground and I think Molumby lost his way in the process - and I blame Graham Potter for not recognising what he had with Molumby and didn't play proper attention to him while he was on loan.
I am pretty sure that Molumby's passing accuracy is regularly among the best in the squad. His industriousness and "chaotic" qualities (as Stephen Kenny once noted) often distract from the fact that he rarely misplaces a pass. You could well be right about the moves impacting his better attacking instincts. Similar thing seems to have happened to Jeff Hendrick, who broke through at Derby County as a midfielder who got forward a lot and scored his share of goals. Then he moved to Burnley where his creative freedom was stifled.
End Apartheid Now! One Team in Ireland!
FWIW, Molumby attempted, and completed more passes than any other Irish player against France - 40 completed from 42 attempted, or about one every two minutes
https://www.instagram.com/p/Cw6D2oSoaM2/
And which way did they go? There was a stage in the first half where about two team mates and Alan Browne urged him to slip one around a corner out right ahead of Browne. Molumby turned around and passed it backwards. It was galling in a game where he wasn't being pressed a pile and we couldn't get the ball forward fastly and accurately.
I have been hoping he'd improve but when you are seeing that kind of stuff happening where the percentage of completion is closer to 90% than his usual 100% it is hard to keep rooting.
And, yes, he used to be loving those passes and playing front foot football. Less so nowadays. Hopefully he can train it with confidence and time.
According to who scored - https://www.whoscored.com/Matches/16...France-Ireland - it was 41 passes in total, 20 forward, 21 backward.
I forgot Molumby went off on 68 minutes, so it was closer to one pass around every minute and a half
Last edited by seanfhear; 09/09/2023 at 2:19 PM.
“Give them space lads, plenty of time to get shots away. We have nothing by to fear - Market Fields, the Showgrounds, Terryland, you name it I’ve been there, and players never score long shots against my teams. France more or less at the same level so we should be grand. Are you listening Festy? Enda, Shano, Johnser, Jayo, Joshy - Whatever you do, remember, just give them lots of time on the ball and plenty of space to shoot from distance.”
That’s how the team talks go.
Romania v Israel tonight and Albania v Poland tomorrow are games of interest for Ireland. Ireland need Israel and Poland to qualify automatically with Romania and Albania missing out.
Ah, here, Stu, that's a weak strawman. That's not how it works. Every decision made about how a team plays is a compromise. No one is saying, "Make this mistake." They might be obsessing about stopping one kind of attack and inadvertantly priming another. The best balance is delicate, or managers would never get an edge on each other tactically. I'm not arguing that's what's happening here, but it's hardly implausible.
You can't spell failure without FAI
I know. Read seanfhears post though. It implies that Kenny is completely brainless, lacks anny awareness and doesn’t coach with account for the quality of the opposition he faces. We all have our opinions on Kenny but come on!!
That’s not true SF. I just read an article this morning where he calls out the issue and talks about the adjustments they have been making and need to make. Obviously more needs to be done on the issue but he’s also not a brainless, blind numpty which is what I took from your original message.
https://www.independent.ie/sport/soccer/international-soccer/stephen-kenny-issues-injury-update-ahead-of-ireland-vs-netherlands/a621700174.html
Kenny confirms Keane and Stevens out and discusses the late call-ups. 3 minute video.
You can't spell failure without FAI
Time for everyone on this forum, a day out from the visit of Holland to the Aviva, to put their thinking caps on and identify the problems besetting our national team and the solutions to fix those problems. I've been listening to, and it's not limited to this forum by any means, Irish lads bang on about this or that for decades now. And I can't remember one solution offered or any type of vision for the future. Unless something changes drastically with the Irish game we'll be here forever moaning about not qualifying for major competitions.
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