A closer look at the Republic of Ireland’s winless run in competitive games

Ireland last won a competitive game against Gibraltar in June 2019.

Damian Spellman
Sunday 05 September 2021 07:56 EDT
Republic of Ireland’s John Egan and Adam Idah, left, appear dejected after the World Cup qualifier draw with Azerbaijan (Niall Carson/PA)
Republic of Ireland’s John Egan and Adam Idah, left, appear dejected after the World Cup qualifier draw with Azerbaijan (Niall Carson/PA) (PA Wire)

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The Republic of Ireland have gone 15 competitive games without a win after Saturday evening’s 1-1 draw with Azerbaijan.

Current manager Stephen Kenny has presided over 10 Nations League fixtures and World Cup qualifiers either side of the Euro 2020 play-off semi-final defeat by Slovakia without a single three-point haul, extending a trend which dates back to the latter stages of predecessor Mick McCarthy’s reign.

Here, the PA news agency takes a look at Ireland’s blank run.

The managers

Kenny has been in charge for 15 matches in total and has recorded just a single win, a 4-1 friendly victory over minnows Andorra in June. His 11 competitive games have resulted in four draws and seven defeats, one of them on penalties in Slovakia after a 90-minute stalemate. It is a sequence, however, which extends back to McCarthy’s second spell, which saw him win three of his first four competitive fixtures – two of them narrowly against Gibraltar – but none of the final four.

The players

There has been a significant turnaround in personnel since Ireland last tasted competitive victory, a 2-0 win over Gibraltar in Dublin in June 2019. Only Seamus ColemanShane Duffy and James McClean who started that night did so against Azerbaijan, while Conor Hourihane and Callum Robinson were used from the bench. Kenny’s starting XI included two 19-year-olds – keeper Gavin Bazunu and striker Troy Parrott – 20-year-old Adam Idah and fellow frontman Aaron Connolly, 21, and 22-year-old midfielder Jayson Molumby.

The near misses

Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo (centre) celebrates scoring his injury-time winner against the Republic of Ireland (Isabel Infantes/PA)
Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo (centre) celebrates scoring his injury-time winner against the Republic of Ireland (Isabel Infantes/PA) (PA Wire)

Kenny’s misfortune is that his team’s most impressive performances have come in heroic defeat against stronger opposition. They lost 3-2 in Serbia having earlier seen strong penalty appeals waved away, and led 1-0 in Portugal having once again been denied what looked like a cast-iron spot-kick before Cristiano Ronaldo’s late double snatched victory from their grasp.

The low points

Duffy’s 87th-minute equaliser against Azerbaijan, ranked 112th in the world, spared Ireland even greater embarrassment, but their nadir came in March when Gerson Rodrigues’ lone strike secured a famous 1-0 win for Luxembourg – currently 96th in FIFA’s ranking table – at the Aviva Stadium.

The goals

Perhaps the crux of the matter. A return of just seven goals in those 15 games goes a long way towards explaining the Republic’s difficulties. Four of them have been scored by defenders – Matt Doherty, John Egan and Duffy, who has two – and five inside the last five minutes of games. Strikers Idah and Connolly are yet to find the back of the net, while Troy Parrott’s two goals to date came in the friendly win over Andorra.

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