Ireland 7-0 Gibraltar
IRELAND MADE LIGHT work of Group D whipping boys Gibraltar at the Aviva Stadium this evening — scoring seven unanswered goals to give them maximum points from two games.
Robbie Keane’s first half hat-trick set the Boys in Green on their way before James McClean’s brace was added to by Wes Hoolahan and an own-goal from Gibraltar goalkeeper Jordan Perez.
Martin O’Neill made five changes to the team which earned a last-gasp win away to Georgia last month. Without the injured Seamus Coleman and James McCarthy, he opted for David Meyler at right back with late call-up Brian Lenihan not even making the bench.
Darron Gibson and Jeff Hendrick were brought in as a midfield pairing while James McClean returned to the team to start on opposite flank to fellow winger Aiden McGeady.
As expected, Ireland dictated possession right from the off and opened up the visitors after five minutes when McGeady spun off his man and crossed to the back post where Hoolahan headed over.
Th3 35,123 who turned at Lansdowne Road didn’t have to wait much longer for the opening goal, however, as Hoolahan returned the favour by picking out McGeady with a delightful through-ball. The Everton winger unselfishly squared for Keane, who finished routinely from close range.
McClean had a point-blank save stopped by Perez before Ireland doubled their lead. Hoolahan was again the provider, this time controlling the ball on his chest before playing it into the path of Keane for the Ireland skipper stroke home.
And the country’s all-time record goalscorer scored the 65th of his international career with the game still just 18 minutes old. Keane saw his effort cleared off the line but when Hoolahan was brought down by a clumsy challenge from Perez, referee Leontios Trattou had little choice but to point to the spot.
Keane sent the keeper the wrong way to convert the penalty and bag his third hat-trick in a green shirt.
In a thoroughly-dominant first half, Hoolahan and McGeady came close to getting their names on the scoresheet but the Boys in Green went into the break with a three-goal advantage.
O’Neill stuck with the same eleven for the second half and the floodgates opened with four more goals in the space of ten minutes. First, Keane teed up McClean and the Wigan man had the easiest of tasks from six yards out — although there was a suspicion of offside.
It was far to say Perez, who works professionally as a fireman, wasn’t having the best of days and his own-goal made it 5-0. He initially saved Keane’s chip but when Hoolahan’s follow-up was blocked, the Gibraltar number one blasted the ball into his own net.
McClean scored his second on 53 minutes before Hoolahan got in on the act with a clever run and low shot at the near post.
Gibraltar boss Allen Bula ended Perez’s misery by replacing him with back-up goalie Jamie Robba while Keane, Hoolahan and Stephen Ward were all withdrawn for Kevin Doyle, Daryl Murphy and Robbie Brady.
Ireland should have had a couple more before the end while Gibraltar eventually managed to cause the Irish backline a problem or two in the dying minutes but 7-0 was how it ended.
Confidence will be sky high after such a one-sided victory but a far tougher test awaits on Tuesday as Ireland now travel to Gelsenkirchen for a meeting with World Cup winners Germany.
Ireland: Forde, Meyler, O’Shea, Wilson, Ward (Brady 70′), McGeady, Hendrick, Gibson, McClean, Hoolahan (Murphy 63′), Keane (Doyle 63′).
Gibraltar: Perez (Robba 60′), Wiseman, J Chipolina, R Casciaro, R Chipolina (c) (Santos 57′), L Casciaro, Bado (Guilling 45′), Walker, Gosling, Perez, Payas.
#4 is madness (if Ive read it right), a team that doesnt get to the Ulster final (eg Armagh lets say) will have a knock out game against (randomly) either a Dublin/Kerry etc or a Clare/Westmeath.. The provincial championships are too unbalanced to be the basis of any seeding
A definite no on the first one. The others might be interesting, though unlikely to see every club introduce an underage hurling team.
@Ian Cunningham: Me thinks number one a great idea. Watching underage players now when they get onto a divisional never mind county panel, think they don’t have to show up for club games. Club ought to always come first for players, unfortunately though, there’s no money for the association incoming from club games, it’s inter county that generates that, alas this motion be turned down
@Jed Ward: Cork have enough injury concerns without having to worry about fellas playing meaningless RedFM League matches. If it was county championship matches maybe. That’s what the split season is for.
@Jed Ward: . The demands on inter county players at both underage and senior level are huge. Younger inter county players between the ages of 19 and 22 have in many cases the very significant additional demands of university competitions to cope with. A balance has to be struck. These huge demands are leading to soft tissue injuries. Additional demands being placed on this group of players are highly questionable.
@Richard Ford: as you say “the demands” on amateur players. There is actually no need to elaborate on this. The top brass don’t give a fiddle about “the demands” on players, players are just a commodity for their chunky pay packets and Croke Park
Would love to see football format returned to lose a game and you’re out of provincial championship. Four province winners go to all Ireland semi final and winners of that game onto final. Then again, it’s all about the money, so not a hope of ever seeing that format again in either code
@Jed Ward: given the commitment and training that players put in these days, you can’t have fellas knocked out after one game.
@Jed Ward: Catch yourself on. That format is outdated and way past its sell by date.
@Richard Ford: all about the money money money,
@Ian it’s taking to absolute Michael out of players who are amateur with all the training and commitment they put in. Again it’s all about the money money money. The Grab All Airgead association.
@Jed Ward: OK, you’re one of them. A GAA hater, who knows nothing about the GAA, but has a smart nickname.
@Ian Cunningham: 100% correct there Ian. Actually I’m an ex county player, now coaching an underage level and vice chairman with my juvenile club.
@Jed Ward: what a crock of … .