Ireland 1
Slovakia 0
Ben Blake reports from Tallaght Stadium
A STEPHANIE ROCHE penalty at the start of the second half was enough to hand the Ireland women’s national team victory over Slovakia today.
Matters off-the-field have put the spotlight on the squad for all the wrong reasons in the past week. The well-publicised dispute with the FAI over working conditions was widely-reported nationally and around the world before a resolution was found in the early hours of Thursday morning.
Despite strong support from the public on their stance, a crowd of 1,037 turned out at Tallaght, which created a pretty subdued atmosphere. The 2pm kick-off time on a Monday afternoon will not have helped attendance figures.
Following two wins, one draw and a defeat at the recent Cyprus Cup, new manager Colin Bell took charge of his first home game for the visit of Slovakia — ranked nine places behind Ireland as the 41st-best team in the world.
He named a strong starting XI for the international friendly with veteran goalkeeper Emma Byrne captaining a side that lined out in a 4-1-4-1 formation, and lone striker Stephanie Roche spearheading the attack.
There was little in the way of chances during the opening exchanges. Roche saw her free-kick sail high and wide, while Byrne kept out a set-piece from Maria Mikolajova.
Slovakia captain Lucia Harsanyova was forced off with an injury on 12 minutes, moments before Harriet Scott’s throw-in found its way to Katie McCabe.
The Arsenal winger, who showed flashes of brilliance and won player-of-the-match, reached the end-line and fizzed the ball across the Slovakian goalmouth but the stretching Roche couldn’t get onto the end of it.
The best chance of the half came five minutes before the interval and fell to Ireland.
Connolly put O’Sullivan through with a nicely-weighted pass and the Cork native opted to shoot first time. Slovakian stopper El Dahabiova got a block on the first effort and then did brilliantly to make a double save from O’Sullivan’s follow-up.
A scrappy 45 minutes came drew to a close and Bell’s frustrations were evident as his bellowing voice could be easily heard around the ground.
The one change at the break saw Byrne withdrawn at the break with Marie Hourihan of Manchester City coming in.
And just two minutes after the restart, Ireland took a deserved lead. O’Sullivan was brought down in the box by Stanislava Likova and Roche stepped up to score from the spot.
🎥 And here is the goal! @MeganConnolly4 fouled for the penalty and @StephanieRoche9 slots it home! #IRLWNT🇮🇪 ahead! pic.twitter.com/M6Ykn1WsTv
— FAIreland (@FAIreland) April 10, 2017
At this point, the home side — who were much-improved — looked well in control of the game and they will be disappointed that the scoreline didn’t reflect that.
McCabe, who was switched onto the right wing, nutmegged her marker and cut inside. Her strike took a deflection on the way to goal but El Dahabiova was well-placed to catch.
Roche then beat the offside trap and flicked the ball over the head of the Slovakian keeper but Lucia Sukova got back well to clear off the line. At the death, substitute Claire O’Riordan was only on the pitch when she poked narrowly wide.
Attention now turns to the 2019 World Cup qualifying draw on 25 April before summer friendlies with Iceland and Scotland.
IRELAND: Byrne (c) (Hourihan 46); Perry, Scott, Quinn, Caldwell; Duggan, O’Gorman, Connolly (Russell 74), O’Sullivan, McCabe (O’Riordan 90); Roche (Littlejohn 88).
SLOVAKIA: El Dahabiova; Harsanyova (c) (Susolova 14), Biroova, Fabova (Havranova 58), Liskova (Brissova 68) , Hmirova, Kosikova (Kovalova 79), Zdechovanova (Slukova 63), Suskova, Bartovicova, Mikolajova.
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2pm KO on a Monday. Do the FAI want to make it possible for people to attend.
For God’s sake 2 o’clock on a working day. Give them a chance. Well done on the result.
With all the publicity last week, that attendance figure is v underwhelming. Terrible shame the match was played in the afternoon and not in the evening. Massive opportunity wasted.
Still, fair play on the result, ladies!
FAI dropping the ball again. Big surprise.
@Daniel Brogan: Their last 2 competitive home games against Portugal and Montenegro were at 6pm and 7pm. These drew attendances of 1500 and 946. Compared to these games todays attendance looks excellent. The team just don’t have a following and an evening kickoff could result in a worse attendance
1000 people at the highest profile women’s game in years, proves how fake people are. It’s all very well posting ‘support’ on social media, but unless you are willing to go to their games, to buy tickets’ your moral support is meaningless.
The reality is nobody gives a shyt about women’s sport in this country, particularly other women. How can you talk about equality. When the men can pack out 55,000- 80,000 seat stadium on a regular basis and the women struggle to get 1000 to 1500 on their best day?
@SuzukaYuiMoa: Being fair, I have been a Connacht fan for most my life.
No way I would ever take a day off work for friendly.
Newcastle Jets u15 boys team beat the Australian senior women’s team 7-0 in a friendly a few years back ,just goes to show to standard of women’s soccer really .
@chris irwin: dead right , I watched a lot of the last women’s world cup… standard was embarrassing
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Great result, was this game just a friendly?
@Killian Mchale: Yep.