The National - News

Ireland risk going from bad to worse under odd duo O’Neill and Keane

- RICHARD JOLLY

The most charismati­c managerial team in internatio­nal football showed their quotabilit­y before they had taken charge of a game. “I’m the bad cop, but he’s the bad, bad cop,” said Martin O’Neill in 2013.

O’Neill and Roy Keane, bringing wisecracks and a death stare respective­ly, make a wonderful punditry panel.

The chances are they could form an entertaini­ng cop show; two mavericks with unconventi­onal methods and outsize personalit­ies would be endlessly watchable.

The increasing­ly pertinent question for Republic of Ireland is whether they remain suited to combining at the helm of a failing national side.

A team noted for solidity and industry have lost their last two competitiv­e games 5-1 and 4-1. Those defeats, to Denmark in the World Cup play-off and Wales on Thursday, were separated by 10 months, but it remains remarkable Ireland conceded nine times in 117 minutes of meaningful football. “Why would it be a crisis?” asked O’Neill. Perhaps Tuesday’s friendly with Poland will support his case.

The evidence of recent years is that it is dangerous to write O’Neill off. The football has been ordinary for much of his reign, but Ireland have compensate­d with magnificen­t moments and memorable results. Ireland were flounderin­g in Euro 2016 qualifying after losing to Scotland. They responded by beating Germany and reaching France.

They were wretched in their group-stage defeat to Belgium in the tournament, but conjured victory against Italy to reach the last 16.

They were mediocre in 2018 World Cup qualifying but secured a play-off place by winning away in Wales.

O’Neill has proved his skills as an escapologi­st, but no one plots a path out of every hole.

If there is a question that the double act is growing tired, it may also be that the context has changed. “The system is failing us,” the former manager Brian Kerr said on Sunday.

The underlying problems of a country with a weak domestic league, without a defined, progressiv­e style of play and which can be reliant on its diaspora are all contributi­ng factors.

The captain Seamus Coleman is a high-class player but perhaps no one else in the current squad is. Their young players are neither especially young nor particular­ly promising.

When Jonathan Walters was ruled out of the Poland game, it left Ireland with three forwards with a combined total of one internatio­nal goal (the left-back Stephen Ward was the squad’s top scorer until he, too, pulled out). And even Walters is on loan at Ipswich Town, 23rd in the Championsh­ip.

Perhaps fortune has deserted Ireland. The list of absentees includes the seasoned Shane Long, the pivotal James McClean and Robbie Brady, the most potent of the younger generation. Maybe Declan Rice would have withdrawn anyway, considerin­g his options amid an approach from England, yet it scarcely helped that Harry Arter was unavailabl­e after a training-ground clash with a vitriolic Keane.

That force of personalit­y can backfire. It underlined the way that the coaching pair can overshadow players who, in turn, are far inferior footballer­s than they were in their respective peaks. Part of the rationale for choosing O’Neill and Keane was that charisma could generate an aura that would be inspiratio­nal but Ireland, whose midfield and forward line could include five Championsh­ip players, can scarcely afford to lose Premier League performers.

Perhaps O’Neill’s feat was to camouflage a gap in ability but it was embarrassi­ngly apparent against Denmark last year and Wales last week.

It would be wrong to blame Keane and him for all of Ireland’s ills, but the risk is things go from bad to bad, bad under their odd couple.

 ??  ?? Republic of Ireland have conceded nine times in 117 minutes under the watch of Martin O’Neill and assistant Roy Keane
Republic of Ireland have conceded nine times in 117 minutes under the watch of Martin O’Neill and assistant Roy Keane
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