Irish Daily Mirror

KENNY OPTS FOR SURPRISE CHELSEA APPOINTMEN­T

- BY PAUL O’HEHIR

CHELSEA coach Anthony Barry has been appointed as Damien Duff’s successor on Ireland’s coaching staff.

Stephen Kenny has gone for a left-field choice of assistant who will work alongside him and Keith

Andrews in the World Cup campaign. Barry (left) was a Coventry team-mate of Ireland chief scout Ruaidhri Higgins and they remain close.

The 34-year-old spent 13 years as a player in the Football League with other clubs like Yeovil, Chester, Accrington, Fleetwood and Wrexham.

His coaching career began at Accrington Stanley before moving to Wigan where he worked under former Sligo Rovers boss Paul Cook.

Barry then moved to

Chelsea under Frank Lampard and will remain in his role with the Premier League side while doubling up with Ireland.

He was a right-hand man to former Blues boss Lampard and has been kept on by Thomas Tuchel.

“The opportunit­y to work in internatio­nal football is something I’m thoroughly looking forward to,” he said.

“I’m looking forward to working with Stephen Kenny and the squad. I’d also like to thank Chelsea for helping facilitate this opportunit­y.”

IT hurts, when you are only trying to help, to read local newspaper headlines saying I’m embroiled in a “row” over the Savage Foundation’s role in the community.

I’m not trying to start a fight or have an argument with anybody. The Savage Foundation was set up to give every child from five to 12-year-old, regardless of background or ability, access to organised coaching at a football club as a hub of the local community.

No hidden agendas, no hijacking of grassroots football teams or leagues, no ‘stealing’ players from existing clubs.

It’s about a level playing field and a pathway into the grassroots system for everyone.

Yes, we would like to start a league affiliated to the Cheshire FA featuring teams drawn from Savage Foundation kids with grassroots clubs joining for free. But it’s not a league to rival existing divisions. It would simply give kids who might not have played football at all a chance to win, lose or draw like anyone else.

The Savage Foundation is almost at capacity for our pilot scheme in Macclesfie­ld. The FA are happy with our motives, happy with the project and happy with our plans to roll it out nationwide. It does not help when an open letter to the local paper from grassroots clubs, asking questions about our plans, is turned into a “row.”

And I’ve already had calls from grassroots clubs who were signatorie­s to the open letter saying they are embarrasse­d that a scheme fuelled only by good intentions has been turned into friction.

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