IRELANDโS 1-0 LOSS to Serbia on Tuesday has left their World Cup qualifying hopes in jeopardy.
Even if the Boys in Green win their final two Group D games against Moldova and Wales, there is no guarantee that they will make it to the play-offs, with the permutations involving the second-place table complicating matters.
If they fail to qualify, the Serbia game will be remembered as the match where it all started to unravel.
Had they won at the Aviva on Tuesday, Ireland would have gone top of the group. Instead, they are now looking at a scenario whereby second place is the best position they can hope for.
In particular, the final 25 minutes of the match will be regarded as deeply frustrating and likely the pivotal point of a failed campaign.
Ireland were presented with a golden opportunity to capitalise as Serbia were reduced to 10 men following Nikola Maksimovicโs sending off for a foul on Daryl Murphy with just over 20 minutes plus stoppage time remaining.
In this tense situation, cool heads were needed. Instead, Irelandโs play in the dying minutes was fraught with tension befitting their perilous situation and lacked the composure needed, as hopes of a World Cup qualifying spot started to fade.
The hostsโ anxiety and desperation for a goal was therefore palpable on several occasions as the game approached its conclusion.
1. Trying to be the hero
Ireland required patient build-up play and subtle, intricate passing in the dying minutes. Serbiaโs imposing defenders would naturally be far less comfortable dealing with pace and ingenuity as opposed to long balls and physicality.
Unfortunately from Irelandโs perspective, there were too many players going for the Hollywood moment, ignoring better options in the process.
Players were continually attempting strikes that would have been goal-of-the-season contenders had they gone in, allowing themselves to be swept up in the emotion of the occasion, instead of wearing Serbia down with sustained pressure.
As can be seen below, David Meyler, James McClean and Conor Hourihane were among the culprits.
Notice, for the Hourihane shot in particular, Jon Walters is free on the edge of the box and throws his hands up in frustration as the Aston Villa man opts to shoot instead of playing him in.
This tendency to ignore the incisive pass in favour of the shot or the long ball happened far too often in the second half and demonstrated a lack of footballing intelligence from this Irish team. Instead of trying to open Serbia up in a creative manner, they were doing what even the most average sides in the world can easily achieve โ pumping balls up to the strikers and attempting hopeful shots from distance. More should be expected from a national team than this unapologetic brand of caveman football.
The above clips show why Ireland could muster just three out of 17 shots on target during the entire game and also why they have managed just two goals at home over the course if the whole campaign, with only four sides currently possessing worse records โ San Marino, Liechtenstein, Latvia and Faroe Islands.
2. Needless fouls
With 25 minutes remaining and 10 men, Serbia were doing all they could to find ways to kill the hostsโ momentum.
The visitors were going down injured all too easily, substituted players were taking their time leaving the field of play and goalkeeper Vladimir Stojkoviฤ consistently took an age with his goal kicks, until he was eventually booked for time-wasting in the dying minutes.
In this situation, one of the worst things you can do as an Irish player is concede a needless foul, thereby slowing the game down more.
Yet, too often, Irish players allowed their frustration to get the better of them, relieving the pressure on Serbia and allowing them to push up the field thanks to the leeway provided by the convenient award of a free kick.
McClean deserves credit for his passion and energy, but there are times when he needs to rein in his enthusiasm โ otherwise, his presence on the pitch is detrimental to the team.
Below are two examples of unnecessary fouls he committed, which ate up considerable time on the clock. Such actions may seem insignificant in isolation, but all these moments of stupidity or ill-discipline tallied together have a substantial impact and can be the difference between winning and losing ultimately.
Again, it comes down to needing cool heads in pressurised situations.
Both McClean and Robbie Brady will now miss the Moldova game through suspension, after they let the frustration of the second half get to them, picking up silly bookings as a result.
3. Lack of composure
As the second half wore on, it became increasingly clear that Ireland were playing in panic mode.
In a way, the performance after half-time was as bad as the Georgia debacle.
In Tbilisi, Ireland could not keep the ball, but at least it was understandable to a degree โ Georgia were pinning them back into the visitorsโ penalty area and they struggled to hold onto possession owing to the pressure they were under. Yet in the second half against Serbia, Ireland were not under any pressure โ the away side sat back and invited them on โ yet they still struggled to string passes together and maintain an element of composure to their play.
Going long became the instinctive action rather than the last resort it should have been โ Ireland actually achieved this dynamic with some success in the first half, where they mixed direct football with some nice passing.
Watch Cyrus Christie below โ a relatively simple ball to James McClean is on, yet he instead hits a hopeful and ultimately inaccurate long pass towards Jon Walters.
And now watch Robbie Brady below. He could easily go short with the throw-in, but instead, despite being well inside his own half, attempts to hurl it ambitiously towards Walters and Ireland end up conceding possession.
The hosts are getting carried away by the excitement of the night on these occasions.
4. Awful delivery
Ireland did not spread the ball to the flanks nearly enough, but on the rare occasions they got it wide, they were usually quite wasteful.
Substitute Callum OโDowda had one decent cross that led to strong penalty claims for a tug on Daryl Murphyโs jersey, but otherwise, the Bristol City winger failed to trouble the opposition unduly with his balls in frequently failing to pass the first man.
Christieโs pace often got him in good positions down the right, but his end product was similarly poor. The inept effort below is just one example of many.
Ultimately, itโs hard to be too harsh on the players for not being quite good enough on the night.
What they lack in skill, they certainly make up for in endeavour. Yet heart can only get you so far in international football, and on Tuesday against Serbia, the Irish team hit a ceiling.
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Very impressed by him over the two games against Salzburg. The price is ridiculously low tooโฆ
Great thing about Liverpoolโs champions league group is that weโve played two teams (Genk and Salzburg) with good young coaches who play very similar styles of football to us. Minamino and Genkโs Berge were the two opposition players who impressed most for me, and the Calibre of journalist (Reddy, Pearce etc) talking about this move does suggest itโs well in place.
Michael Edwards does it again, most likelyโฆ
This would be a very screwed signing from Liverpool if it comes through. Very tidy player and for that price in todays market. Almost no riskโฆ
@Ottomaaan: Screwed indeed
Young,quick,scores goalsโฆa nuisance when he doesnโt have the ball.
Go get him.
No Sancho, so
@Alexi: why, because of the massive 7m itโs going to cost to buy Minamino?
Donโt think the two moves have anything to do with each other.
@Alexi: Cant see klopp signing sancho
@Peter Govan: he definitely doesnโt sound lately like he has the right type of character for klopp or Liverpool
@Alexi: If LFC want Sancho they will get him. With an abundance of WC players itโs very hard to fit someone else in. Perhaps leaving some space for mBappe (summer more likely).
@Alexi: Do liverpool need him? Should be looking at proven players, you could buy 3/4 good squad players for the ยฃ100 million sancho would cost.
Centre back and left back needs backup.
@Paddy Kavanagh: I think they absolutely need him. Liverpoolโs front 3 have been dogged now for 3seasons and there form or fitness will go if they canโt be rotated. Also if u want to continue staying at the top sometimes u need to buy big, I do agree they need lb and CB cover too though.
@6CL: Mbappe is going nowhere near Anfield unless PSG are going out of business or heโs taking a absolutely massive paycut, and I say that as an LFC Fan. Yeah heโs talented, his age profile is right, but his personality suits a move to Madrid where he can live a Galactico lifestyle and actually win important trophies.
@โ:
@6CL: letโs see
@6CL: donโt mean that LFC wonโt win important trophies, we will. Just that compared to being Ligue 1 champions year after year virtually uncontested, La Liga and Copa Del Rey are more importantโฆ
A number of fringe Liverpool players must be watching this with interest. Is he a cheap deal or in to replace them. Harry Wilson, Shaqiri, and Lallana could all move behind him in the pecking order if he makes an impact.
@Dan: I still think thereโs a place for Shaqiri at anfield (might be biased because for some reason I just adore him?!). Think Lallana will be gone in the summer, as will Harry Wilson. Wilson is a decent player but a club like Bournemouth is his level.
@Dan: Lallana will move onโฆ.Milner might too. Liverpool are going to be doing a bit of a minor overhaul this summer anyway, just getting this guy in early
@James Doyle: If Leeds come up Milner will leave.
@Peter Dunne: especially with milners current deal up at the end of the year. Be sorry to see him go, heโs been a great servant since coming in
James Pearce reckons hes ours on Jan 1st.
Beat UTD Milan & Moenchengladbach to his signature.Just over 7m.
Good business.
Edwardโs strikes again.
He was superb in both games and wouldnโt cost a penny as the club would sell a million shirts in Japan once he signed.