The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Nicholl urges Northern Ireland to make it six home points from six

- By Ian Parker

Jimmy Nicholl, the assistant manager, has urged Northern Ireland to capitalise on the momentum from their 2-0 win over Estonia when they face Belarus tomorrow.

Michael O’neill’s team made a winning start to their Euro 2020 qualifying campaign on Thursday thanks to second-half goals from Niall Mcginn and Steven Davis.

The task has not changed going into tomorrow’s match at Windsor Park, with these two opening home ties seen as must-win games in the context of a difficult Group C that includes Holland and Germany.

Six points may be a minimum requiremen­t ahead of tougher tasks to come, but Nicholl also knows the confidence it would bring could change the entire outlook for Northern Ireland – and bring back memories of their successful Euro 2016 qualifying campaign.

“It’s great seeing yourself top of the group rather than bottom,” he said. “They proved it in the last qualifying campaign and it’s the same in this one. The players will be sitting there thinking, ‘We know how we felt last time’.

“If we can get off to a flier, get our heads down with Estonia and Belarus away in the summer, it’s a chance to accumulate points if you go about your job properly, before we meet the obvious in Germany and Holland.”

Thursday’s game against an Estonia side ranked 60 places lower was the easiest on paper, but victory was not always assured as the hosts huffed and puffed through the first half before Mcginn broke the deadlock in the 56th minute.

O’neill said he had done nothing to change his tactics from the same possession-based approach they used during the unsuccessf­ul Nations League campaign, yet Nicholl said minor tweaks had made the difference in the second half.

“We couldn’t get [Steven] Davis on the ball, we couldn’t get [Paddy] Mcnair on the ball, George Saville likes to be on the ball but we never managed it,” he said.

“That affects the wide men but it just changed in the second half. Craig Cathcart and Jonny Evans were stepping into the game and it was them knocking the ball wide. The game changed dramatical­ly.”

Nicholl expects a similar approach against Belarus – and similar personnel carrying it out.

Gareth Mcauley (hamstring) returned to training yesterday after missing the Estonia match but both Corry Evans (hamstring) and Gavin Whyte (thigh) remain sidelined and Nicholl cautioned against making too many changes.

“You can make these decisions based on fitness levels but if you bring one out you’ve got to make sure the next one is going to contribute,” he said. “We’re not going to play them just because they’re fresh. You’ve got to play them because they can do an equal job. I wouldn’t like to think there’ll be too many changes, to be honest.”

 ??  ?? On the ball: Steven Davis scored Northern Ireland’s second goal with a penalty
On the ball: Steven Davis scored Northern Ireland’s second goal with a penalty

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