Irish Independent

Miguel Delaney: O’Neill is gone but change is needed across the board

Former boss was responsibl­e for some glorious days but limitation­s ultimately caught up with him

- MIGUEL DELANEY

IN THE depressing last few months of the Martin O’Neill regime, one recent Irish call-up – not Declan Rice – went to a senior player to express bemusement about managerial approaches he said would be seen as “amateurish” by some of his lower-level sides. The senior player responded, saying that it’s almost not worth mentioning because O’Neill “doesn’t tend to react well to being questioned”.

That certainly came across in fairly belligeren­t public appearance­s by O’Neill over those last few months. It is a belligeren­ce, at least towards new ideas in football, that has partly cost him and assistant Roy Keane their jobs.

Their time is at an end after almost exactly five years, a tenure that mostly represente­d a qualified success, just with so many more qualificat­ions – and outright arguments – than successes of late.

When O’Neill wasn’t deflecting criticism by appealing to the authority of the 1970s through increasing­ly tedious anecdotes about his time under Brian Clough – a manager who retired before most of the current Irish squad were born – he was definitive­ly rejecting that criticism, and instead appealing to the argument that any kind of success with that squad was Clough-like alchemy.

He certainly believed he was still capable of it.

The 66-year-old recently took the unusual step for a manager of guaranteei­ng a result, insisting after October’s drab 1-0 home defeat to Wales that Ireland would of course qualify for Euro 2020. Why?

“Because I’m good,” O’Neill said, before repeating the words: “I’ll win,

I’ll win.”

That desperate response was the only argument left, and there wasn’t much to it.

His team have been far from good over the last year and whatever about winning, they could barely score. Ireland have now gone 396 minutes without a goal.

O’Neill did not illustrate he had any idea about how to solve it. When pressed on it, he would rather reductivel­y point to the lack of “a natural scorer”, like Robbie Keane.

The management staff would privately say the greater problem was just “the lack of players”, full-stop.

That is very difficult to dispute, and O’Neill and Keane have been somewhat unlucky in inheriting a long-gestating situation that has led to Ireland’s weakest talent pool in at least 40 years.

It is now mostly a Championsh­ip-level squad, the inevitable result of long-term FAI CEO John Delaney’s inability to tackle obvious longer-term problems within Irish football.

Ireland has long produced players – like the Keanes, or Damien Duff – by luck and coincidenc­e and proximity to the Premier League rather than any design. That luck has run out.

Almost every level of the system is dysfunctio­nal or disconnect­ed, from the honing of young talent to the beleaguere­d domestic league, now right up to the senior side.

Almost every institutio­nal decision in addressing these issues has, meanwhile, been merely incrementa­l or temporary, but that includes the bizarre choice to award O’Neill with a new contract at the start of the year.

Ireland have much bigger problems than the manager, and he is far from the only figure who needs replacing, but it can also be true he has become a problem in himself.

Some of this is just a natural case of a regime running its course, as happens so often in football.

There has been no suggestion O’Neill has been able to successful­ly oversee a transition in the squad, even if that transition had left him with a much weaker team than the one he took to Euro 2016.

That is also something that feels connected to the specific way he manages. A manager who generally leaves the training-ground coaching to trusted assistants, O’Neill would effectivel­y use them as his database, before offering key little pieces of football insight and rousing speeches in the dressing-room.

That can have an exceptiona­l initial effect and he did have excellent early

results. O’Neill is one of just four Ireland managers to have qualified for an internatio­nal tournament, something that will preserve his legacy.

His ability to emotionall­y push players further also occasional­ly saw the team pushed further than even under Jack Charlton and Mick McCarthy.

Unlike the moral victories of draws that usually characteri­sed their most successful days, O’Neill got wins, and big ones, on big nights.

This Ireland team beat world champions Germany in a crucial game to first send the side on the way to Euro 2016, and then Italy at the tournament to send them through to the last 16.

They were also a half away from eliminatin­g the hosts, France. They were able to hope, there was good emotion around the team again.

That is something O’Neill restored, and he is responsibl­e for some of the Irish team’s greatest games.

It’s just that, when that emotion runs out, and it all goes a bit stale, a manager that so plays on it isn’t left with much. Especially in the modern game, and especially when there’s not much to the squad.

Whatever about knowing ways to play and co-ordinated methods of attack, the Irish players often didn’t know where they were playing.

O’Neill would only name his team in the hour before games, and not all that specifical­ly.

Sources say that Callum O’Dowda and Harry Arter only realised they were supposed to be playing on other sides of midfield through animated calls after the match had started.

Arguments

This is why the arguments about the lack of a natural goalscorer are themselves so lacking.

It is instead all the more important that teams short on talent have more instructio­n, more design, something that really was lacking with O’Neill. Rudimentar­y tactics and motivation­al speeches are no longer enough.

Ireland need fresh ideas. Dundalk manager Stephen Kenny has been put forward, and would be a progressiv­e choice.

Delaney is likely to want a more glamorous name due to the national team being far and away the FAI’s main source of income – another reflection of the wider problem.

It was also the attraction behind Roy Keane as assistant manager, and a factor that could yet see Robbie Keane serve as an assistant to a returning McCarthy. One collateral of this is that the former midfielder lost what at one point seemed a certain job as O’Neill’s outright successor.

Nothing is certain about the Irish team now, other than that bigger change than the manager is required. It’s just that change really is required there, too. (© Independen­t News Service)

Whatever about knowing ways to play, the Irish players often didn’t know where they were playing

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 ??  ?? Needing a leg up: Martin O’Neill keeps an eye on his players during a training session in Abbotstown
Needing a leg up: Martin O’Neill keeps an eye on his players during a training session in Abbotstown

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