AS HE STOOD solemn-faced and arms akimbo alongside his chastened team-mates and listened to a loudspeaker-wielding supporter harangue the Lyon squad on behalf of thousands of angry ultras after a 4-1 pumping by Paris Saint-Germain, Jake O’Brien would have been forgiven for thinking…what on earth have I let myself in for?
At that point O’Brien hadn’t even made his debut for the club he joined from Crystal Palace for €1 million in the summer.
Less than nine months later, as O’Brien and Lyon renew acquaintances with PSG in the French Cup final tonight, the question everyone else is asking is…how has this happened?
O’Brien is one of the most remarkable stories at Lyon this season, while Lyon are the most remarkable stories in Europe this season.
That September hammering to PSG was only Lyon’s fourth game of the season, with the ultras scolding the players, warning them not to further tarnish the club shirt. It didn’t spark an immediate turnaround in form, though, with Laurent Blanc soon fired and his replacement, Fabio Grosso, then booted after only one win in nine games.
At that point Lyon, seven-time champions and among the grandees of French football, were bottom of the league with only three points from 12 games and staring relegation in the face for the first time since 1951.
Amid the turmoil, the club took a punt on youth team coach Pierre Sage, whose only prior first-team experience to that point was as an assistant with third-tier Red Star FC. As it turns out, appointing Sage transcended the merely, er, wise. It was a miracle call.
Not only did Sage stave off relegation, he lifted the team to sixth, sealing Europa League qualification on the final day of the season. No side in France picked up more points after the turn of the year than Sage’s Lyon, making a bargain out of the €25,000 fine the club had to pay after game because Sage had not started his Uefa Pro Licence coaching course.
Securing Lige Un status and European football has been garnished by a run to tonight’s Cup final, the headline act of which is of course Kylian Mbappe in what will be his final game for PSG. (There are some murmurings that the famously stubborn PSG coach Luis Enrique is considering punishment-dropping Mbappe for the final, but pragmatism will surely win out.)
O’Brien, however, is aiming to become only the second Irishman to win the Coupe de France, after Bernard Williams won it with Sochaux back in 1937.
He is not the only Irishman to play at centre-back for Lyon, as Mick McCarthy had a brief and inglorious spell at the club in 1989. O’Brien, by contrast, has made a considerable impact in his first season. His transfer owes much to the sport’s modern dynamics. Lyon were under a kind of transfer probation in the summer, with French football’s financial watchdog raising alarm at the club’s finances and restricting their budget as a result. O’Brien – already within the purview of owner John Textor’s multi-club network at Crystal Palace and having previously been loaned to another of his clubs, Molenbeek of Belgium – was among the cut-price summer arrivals. The €1 million transfer fee and O’Brien’s EU and red-tape-free passport were further incentives on Lyon’s end.
While Blanc was sceptical and the player thought he may need to make another loan deal to force his way into the first-team picture, Grosso arrived and offered O’Brien an opportunity in a league game with Reims. He took it, and Sage kept faith with his Irish centre-back: from his debut against Reims, O’Brien missed just one league game across the rest of the season, and that was due to suspension.
While Alex Lacazette’s 19 goals has been crucial to salvaging Lyon’s season, O’Brien was their second-highest scorer in Ligue Un, with four goals.
Success has many different beholders but the industry’s baseline for a successful transfer is whether a player appears in more than half the first team’s minutes across their spell at the club. O’Brien is so far way clear of that bar: he has clocked 2,370 Ligue Un minutes this season, and another 360 minutes in the Coupe de France thus far.
O’Brien is also an example of what Irish football needs into the immediate future and beyond. Having benchmarked against the rest of Europe, the FAI said last month that we need at least 36 players averaging 1,350 minutes each across Europe’s top five leagues if we want to remain competitive in qualifying for major tournaments.
This season, only six Irish players hit that threshold, and only Dara O’Shea and Nathan Collins played more top-five minutes than O’Brien. (For the completionists out there: Josh Cullen, Chiedozie Ogbene, and Evan Ferguson complete that list.)
Plus, O’Brien is one of only two Irish internationals to have qualified for Europe next season from the top five leagues. (This achievement is the exclusive remit of Cork, as Caoimhín Kelleher is the other player to have done so.)
Though he is now 6′ 4″, O’Brien was a late physical developer: he only really hit his growth spurt from the age of 16 and didn’t play for Ireland until U21 level. One of the reasons he didn’t add the muscle he should have during his late teens is because he is Type 1 diabetic, and O’Brien now takes insulin and manages his blood sugar levels.
At 23, O’Brien is of the same generation as ‘Kenny’s Kids’, but while Adam Idah, Troy Parrott, Jason Knight, Nathan Collins, and Jasyon Molumby have all got at least 20 senior caps each – with Andrew Omobamidele and Aaron Connolly each one cap from double figures – but he has yet to make his senior debut, having earned his first squad call-up for the friendly games last March. The June friendlies against Hungary and Portugal should see that box ticked.
Lyon’s post-Christmas resuscitation did feature another 4-1 hammering to PSG, this time at the Parc des Princes. They are outsiders for tonight’s season crescendo but given their and O’Brien’s penchant for the near-miraculous, it would be foolish to write them off.
Lyon vs Paris Saint-Germain, KO 8pm; No live TV coverage in Ireland
Liverpool will win with ease.
You won the village idiot award of the day already.
I don’t remember that.
You won a cuckoo clock
Nice to see Mata start again ahead of Lingard people will moan about Fellaini but was good in last two rounds.. My biggest worry is a sending off for him.
Do you think Mata will be gone next year if Jose shows up? I hope not.
Bleedin FA cup is turning into Super Bowl
It’s sad United used to win league titles and the champions league….they are happy trying to get 4th every season and winning the FA cup. Paul Scholes was right United have turned into Arsenal. #eraisover
Don’t worry don’t cry..
It’s been three season since United won last, get over yourself. No-one can stay at the top forever.
What makes you say they are happy. United fans are furious at the drop in form over the last 4 years
Classic clattenburg cock up there, how is he considered the best ref right now?
Ya he’s a disgrace, bottled sending cabaye and Delaney off. Going out to injury players is an utter disgrace . He had no problem throwing around yellows cards for hand bags but ignores leg breakers.
Palace will feel very aggrieved with that decision. Poor refereeing from Clattenberg.
You pop up infrequently but ref decisions go for or against in every game. Reality is United fans would prefer 4th over FA, just like Liverpool. Ye will do well under Klopp and you know that.
C’mon Palace!
Haha GGMU
Scottish Cup Final 3-2 Hibernian beat Rangers, one of the best games of football I have seen for years even considering it was Scottish football
The pitch invasion after was even better….hup the Hibees!
Disallowed goal. Answers on a postcard please.
Pardew should have a good interview if they lose….
I’m hoping for a 2-1 win for United. I can’t see Palace making it as comfortable for United as they did at Old Trafford in April.
Martin Keown is the worst commentator
Ever !
Woohoo. Deserved win.
United are so boring to watch. Awful first half from a neutral perspective
From a neutral point of view I was looking forward to both games today. Scottish cup was brilliant, this has been really poor. Clattenberg is a wab.
Commiserations to Crystal Palace. Worthy finalists, and it could have gone either way. Congrats to Man United.
Please not another 30 mins.. #Dire
Do you not realise that you can change the channel.
Get in thereeeeeeeeee !!!!!
Ah christ Fellaini starts :-(
At least he’s not playing as a striker or attacking mid…
He’s good for a few peoples elbows.
He’ll properly score then
LVG OUT.
#Moyes in.
He gone now
Expect Man Utd to win, LvG did steady the ship towards the end and looked better, just do not know which Palace team will show up……
How did he? They fooked fourth place away…
A top 4 finished was thrown away long before the last few games , that last few just made it still mathematically possible
4th was being fooked away by Man City… You do actually follow what happens, right?
They fooked away a lot more then fourth place, you do actually follow what happens?
So, you gave up on your original comment? You do follow what you are saying, right?
How am I!!? Utd did fook away fourth place but previously city fooked away any chance they had of winning the league. So again, do you follow it at all??
Fooking hell lads
He properly saw van Goals tactics
PUNCHEON!!!!!
Great win for Hibs!
Damian Delaney was outstanding.Martin O’Neill, please ask Damian to play for Ireland, ignore Keane, he won’t refuse.
It’s o Neill that has the problem with him
I was of the option that Delaney had a problem with Keane since Ipswitch.
Ya he did have a falling out with Keane at Ipswich, but he was asked about it before and said’ its not Roy who had the problem with me at all ‘. There was talk that he would only come back if he was guaranteed a start. O Neill told him where to go
Will take it and be glad of a cup. Springboard for better things hopefully.
What sort of a dirtbag , takes off his club shirt and throws it on the ground after scoring, the mind boggles .
Yours would !
…….
disgraceful scenes.
oops wrong article
Just some prlck lads, move along.
Well done to Palace , a great game best final in years
It was a terrible game. What you talking about Willis
Someone tell who the second commentator on TV3 is!! It’s driving me mad
Welsh hippy we did enjoy that .
Great win , great week for United fans
Yeaaaaaaaaaahhhhhh
Years ago winning the fa cup meant something unfortunately not nowadays…
Fellaini for man of the match!