IT’S NOT UNUSUAL for followers of Irish sport to travel the length of the country – or overseas – to follow their county or national teams without the security of already having a match ticket.
It’s pretty rare, though, for someone without a ticket to take a solid 24-hour journey to get there – and to end up watching one half of the game in the best seat in the house, and the other half sat in the opposing team’s dugout.
That’s what happened to Ballincollig man Conor Cunningham last Friday, though – who took a long-winded 24-hour journey to Tallinn, and blagged his way onto the touchline in the A Le Coq arena for Ireland’s 4-0 win… by borrowing an Estonian team tracksuit.
“Basically I’d been to a couple of Irish away matches,” Cunningham told TheJournal.ie this morning. “The last one we could make was Macedonia, away [in June, whenIreland won 2-0].Six of us went on that trip. We had such great craic; we seemed to be telling stories about it for ages.”
Spurred on by the draw for the play-off, the same group of six – plus five more – decided to head for Tallinn, but weren’t keen on paying inflated prices for direct flights to the Estonian capital.
“We ended up taking flights from Cork to London, then from London to Stockholm, from Stockholm to Riga, and then a five-hour bus from Riga to Tallinn,” Cunningham recounts. “We were going for about 24 hours straight.”
The long-winded travel route saved the group some serious money, though – costing them around €150 each return, compared to a €350 direct flight to Estonia and back.
Desperation
But, nonetheless, the lads were still travelling without tickets – and were unsuccessful in trying to get any in advance, finding that many other large groups had also travelled without the full compliment of matchday tickets.
“Every group we seemed to meet, there was someone looking for tickets,” Conor says. “But there didn’t seem to be any going on the Thursday.”
Advertisement
Such was their desperation that the group spent the Friday camped out in Ireland’s hotel – hoping desperately that they might bump into a player or FAI official who might have some spares.
We heard [FAI chief executive] John Delaney was raffling some tickets off, but unfortunately we just missed them… so myself and one of the lads said we’d chance our arms and see if we’d bump into one of the players wandering around.
“We were hoping we’d see Seamus Coleman – we heard one or two of his family hadn’t travelled, because he wasn’t in the squad,” but there was no sign of the Everton midfielder.
“We ended up bumping into Giovanni Trapattoni – and we got photos and stuff signed,” Conor recalls – but there was no luck finding a spare ticket for the 10,000-seater stadium.
In a last-ditch attempt to get in, the lads went to the stadium – where five of them managed to buy tickets, leaving the other six to try alternative options.
Bluffers
We came across the media entrance, and said, ‘Right, the game is kicking off fairly soon, we’ll chance our arm.’ One of the lads got straight through without copping anything, but by the time the rest of us came along, they copped something wasn’t right.
We tried to bluff – ‘we had been in, but we left our passes inside’, or something – but no luck.
It was then that Conor’s luck changed. As some of the other Irish fans continued to distract the security guards, he noticed an open doorway – and decided to wander in, hoping there might another door inside which could lead him in.
“When I went through it was a dead-end room, but I stopped and saw a bag of footballs. I thought, ‘Right, I’ll go over now, and chance my arm and get on the pitch as a ball-boy.’
“When I got over I picked up the footballs, and right alongside it was an Estonia tracksuit. I kitted out straight away – putting the tracksuit on over my jeans and jersey – and just started making a walk for the entrance.”
And it worked. Clad in the same gear as the Estonian backroom team, Cunningham walked straight past the security and up to the halfway line, where he sat down in the Estonian dugout a few minutes after the game had begun.
People from home had seen him on TV and were simply incredulous: Was that Conor’s shaven head in the background behind the Ireland boss?
Their suspicions were confirmed a few minutes later, when a wayward pass went out for a throw – and Conor stepped up to hand over a new ball, while looking straight into the TV cameras.
Lucky man: how a ticketless Irish fan ended up in Estonia's dugout
“It was a bit much, alright,” Conor concedes in hindsight, “but I’d probably consider myself a bit of a chancer. If you don’t take the risk, you’re not going to get the reward.”
At the end of the game – which Ireland won 4-0, against the hosts who finished with just nine men – he decided he’d chance his arm. Again.
I said I’d try and get out on the pitch and ask for a jersey… a load of Irish fans had queued up at the gates to the tunnel, but I was pure acting as if I owned the place – just going, ‘Excuse me, please, coming through.’
Security saw me coming and everyone was just stepping out of my way… I pointed at the bag of footballs, said I’d to collect them, and strolled out onto the pitch – celebrating with the Irish players and telling the Irish lads how I got in.
He even followed the team into the tunnel and convinced midfielder Keith Andrews to give him his matchday jersey – but didn’t get to take the Ipswich midfielder’s shirt because he was taken aside to be presented with the Man of the Match award.
“Robbie [Keane] was on the other side of me doing another interview… so there’s me, making an interview of both their interviews, with me stood in between them up against the Irish background.”
And that was when his cover was blown. A security guard – noticing that it was suspicious for an Estonian official to be so cheerful about a 4-0 loss – asked him to produce his matchday pass.
There was no drama though: “I couldn’t produce a pass – I was just told, ‘You’ll have to leave’, so I just said, ‘Grand’ and left.”
Outside he was reunited with his friends who were amazed as he presented his video footage – and the texts from home vouching that he had not only managed to blag his way in for free, but was watching from the sidelines as Ireland pulled off a remarkable win.
And as for the summer in Poland and the Ukraine? Conor says he might just try it again. “I’ll definitely head over in the summer. I might just have to try something like that again – the ticket prices will be crazy,” he jokes.
Is there any advice he’d offer anyone else looking to chance their arm to follow the Boys in Green?
“I suppose, just chance it. What’s the worst that can happen? If you don’t chance it, you’ll never know. That’s the way I was thinking.”
Lucky man: how a ticketless Irish fan ended up in Estonia's dugout
IT’S NOT UNUSUAL for followers of Irish sport to travel the length of the country – or overseas – to follow their county or national teams without the security of already having a match ticket.
It’s pretty rare, though, for someone without a ticket to take a solid 24-hour journey to get there – and to end up watching one half of the game in the best seat in the house, and the other half sat in the opposing team’s dugout.
That’s what happened to Ballincollig man Conor Cunningham last Friday, though – who took a long-winded 24-hour journey to Tallinn, and blagged his way onto the touchline in the A Le Coq arena for Ireland’s 4-0 win… by borrowing an Estonian team tracksuit.
Video by CunninghamTheHero on YouTube
“Basically I’d been to a couple of Irish away matches,” Cunningham told TheJournal.ie this morning. “The last one we could make was Macedonia, away [in June, when Ireland won 2-0]. Six of us went on that trip. We had such great craic; we seemed to be telling stories about it for ages.”
Spurred on by the draw for the play-off, the same group of six – plus five more – decided to head for Tallinn, but weren’t keen on paying inflated prices for direct flights to the Estonian capital.
“We ended up taking flights from Cork to London, then from London to Stockholm, from Stockholm to Riga, and then a five-hour bus from Riga to Tallinn,” Cunningham recounts. “We were going for about 24 hours straight.”
The long-winded travel route saved the group some serious money, though – costing them around €150 each return, compared to a €350 direct flight to Estonia and back.
Desperation
But, nonetheless, the lads were still travelling without tickets – and were unsuccessful in trying to get any in advance, finding that many other large groups had also travelled without the full compliment of matchday tickets.
“Every group we seemed to meet, there was someone looking for tickets,” Conor says. “But there didn’t seem to be any going on the Thursday.”
Such was their desperation that the group spent the Friday camped out in Ireland’s hotel – hoping desperately that they might bump into a player or FAI official who might have some spares.
“We were hoping we’d see Seamus Coleman – we heard one or two of his family hadn’t travelled, because he wasn’t in the squad,” but there was no sign of the Everton midfielder.
“We ended up bumping into Giovanni Trapattoni – and we got photos and stuff signed,” Conor recalls – but there was no luck finding a spare ticket for the 10,000-seater stadium.
In a last-ditch attempt to get in, the lads went to the stadium – where five of them managed to buy tickets, leaving the other six to try alternative options.
Bluffers
It was then that Conor’s luck changed. As some of the other Irish fans continued to distract the security guards, he noticed an open doorway – and decided to wander in, hoping there might another door inside which could lead him in.
“When I went through it was a dead-end room, but I stopped and saw a bag of footballs. I thought, ‘Right, I’ll go over now, and chance my arm and get on the pitch as a ball-boy.’
“When I got over I picked up the footballs, and right alongside it was an Estonia tracksuit. I kitted out straight away – putting the tracksuit on over my jeans and jersey – and just started making a walk for the entrance.”
And it worked. Clad in the same gear as the Estonian backroom team, Cunningham walked straight past the security and up to the halfway line, where he sat down in the Estonian dugout a few minutes after the game had begun.
Immediately his phone began to go into meltdown – because the TV cameras had picked him up, standing behind Trapattoni, making a video of himself standing beside the pitch.
People from home had seen him on TV and were simply incredulous: Was that Conor’s shaven head in the background behind the Ireland boss?
Their suspicions were confirmed a few minutes later, when a wayward pass went out for a throw – and Conor stepped up to hand over a new ball, while looking straight into the TV cameras.
Conor Cunningham on the touchline
Conor Cunningham on the touchline
“It was a bit much, alright,” Conor concedes in hindsight, “but I’d probably consider myself a bit of a chancer. If you don’t take the risk, you’re not going to get the reward.”
Not long after handing over the ball for the throw-in, the matchday fourth official spotted Conor on the touchline and suggested that he move back into the stand – where he ended up “with the best seat in the house”, five or six rows from the pitch.
At the end of the game – which Ireland won 4-0, against the hosts who finished with just nine men – he decided he’d chance his arm. Again.
He even followed the team into the tunnel and convinced midfielder Keith Andrews to give him his matchday jersey – but didn’t get to take the Ipswich midfielder’s shirt because he was taken aside to be presented with the Man of the Match award.
“Robbie [Keane] was on the other side of me doing another interview… so there’s me, making an interview of both their interviews, with me stood in between them up against the Irish background.”
Video by CunninghamTheHero on YouTube
And that was when his cover was blown. A security guard – noticing that it was suspicious for an Estonian official to be so cheerful about a 4-0 loss – asked him to produce his matchday pass.
There was no drama though: “I couldn’t produce a pass – I was just told, ‘You’ll have to leave’, so I just said, ‘Grand’ and left.”
Outside he was reunited with his friends who were amazed as he presented his video footage – and the texts from home vouching that he had not only managed to blag his way in for free, but was watching from the sidelines as Ireland pulled off a remarkable win.
And as for the summer in Poland and the Ukraine? Conor says he might just try it again. “I’ll definitely head over in the summer. I might just have to try something like that again – the ticket prices will be crazy,” he jokes.
Is there any advice he’d offer anyone else looking to chance their arm to follow the Boys in Green?
“I suppose, just chance it. What’s the worst that can happen? If you don’t chance it, you’ll never know. That’s the way I was thinking.”
Euros here we come: here’s everything you need to know about Poland and Ukraine
Saving face: how the Estonian media reported Ireland’s qualification
Game on: UEFA confirm seeding for Euro 2012
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
A Le Coq A Le Coq stadium Boys in Green Chancer Conor Cunningham Cork Editor's picks Estonia Giovanni Trapattoni Keith Andrews Robbie Keane