Thursday, February 7, 2013

Ireland vs. Poland - Review

A 2-0 win was a flattering reward for Ireland's efforts at Lansdowne Road last night, after an oft-times calamitous first half, littered with non-existent ball retention and clumsy individual performances from certain players. While victory represents a morale boost, particularly for a significantly understrength team, there are some nagging concerns about tactics, formations, selections and injuries ahead of the campaign-defining double-header in March.

Poland took the initiative in the first half, holding possession in midfield and taking advantage of Irish sloppiness on the ball. During those opening forty-five minutes, Ireland completed only 63% of their passes, which is a dreadful record at this level. The back four were among the chief culprits, though they were abetted in their wastefulness by the continued non-presence of available midfielders, as Obraniak dropped deep to help the Poles outnumber their counterparts in the centre. Greg Cunningham often needed McClean's assistance on the left, where Glik and Blaszczykowski combined with aggression and directness. Ireland resorted to long balls up to the debutant Conor Sammon, who lacked the control or savvy to bring those around him into the game. Though Poland created few out-and-out chances, some wayward kicking from Forde gifted a couple of chances to Lewandowski and Obraniak, which should have given Poland the lead before Clark's opener, a result of Brady's excellent dead-ball delivery.

Ireland improved in the second half, and rarely looked threatened, though credit for this can be mitigated by the laconic pace of the game and lack of real urgency from the Polish. Hoolahan's introduction - as it did against Greece - gave Ireland an extra dimension in midfield, and his expertly-taken goal was a fitting reward. Hendrick's cameo, and prominent role in the second goal, suggests a level of technical composure and vision which could be a huge asset to Ireland in the future, if his talent can be nurtured.

In the end, a 2-0 win is a curious result, given that Ireland performed and passed much better against Greece, but lost 1-0. The manager's faith in the formation will be vindicated by this win, and the team to start in Stockholm will closely resemble that which huffed and puffed in Kazakhstan and the Faroes. That will not be enough to win, or even get a point, in Stockholm, and may also be punished against an improving Austrian side. Trapattoni's faith in limited players like McShane, Ward, Green, Whelan, Keogh, Cox and now Sammon could be harshly punished if Ireland succumb to more injuries between now and D-Day at the end of March. Returns for Coleman, Wilson and McGeady may improve matters within this limited formation, but Hoolahan, and his probable non-selection, is the elephant in the room - made even more stark by his contribution last night.

Player Ratings:

Forde - 6. Made a good save from Obraniak, and a few necessary ventures from his area to thwart Lewandowski, but his kicking brings to mind the travails of Wayne Henderson. Poland were almost gifted two goals by Forde's howlers in the first half.

McShane - 5. Aimless balls, clumsiness, and poor decision-making in possession. Stark contrast to what Coleman has brought to the position in recent games, which is demanded of an international full-back in the modern game.

Cunningham - 7. Up against a difficult opponent in Dortmund's Blaszczykowski, but did a decent job in defence, despite losing his footing on a few occasions. Positionally much better than Ward, and a higher ceiling for improvement. Some wasteful balls.

O'Shea - 6. Did little wrong defensively against  Lewandowski, but his lack of composure on the ball led to Polish possession time and again.

Clark - 7. Did well. Assertive in the tackle, no real mistakes, and a well-taken goal. Positioning was impressive in dealing with the deep-lying Obraniak. Should be in contention to start in Stockholm.

McCarthy - 7. Did little wrong, showed for the ball more often than Whelan, and kept it moving, but needs to be more assertive. Would shine alongside more technical midfield players.

Whelan - 5. Another poor display. Passing is not up to the required standard for this level. Shows no ceiling for improvement.

McClean - 5. Hugely disappointing. Hard-running, but brainless and devoid of subtlety in possession.

Brady - 7. Quiet enough, but his set-piece delivery is excellent, and seems like a good, technical player. Needs to play at a higher club level to really improve.

Sammon - 4. It was like watching an alcoholic who had won a competition to play for Ireland. A comically clumsy touch not seen in the Irish forward line since the days of Gary Doherty, with no evidence of using his robust frame to compete in the air, and no ability to link with Long or the midfield. Genuinely appalling.

Long - 6. Was isolated for much of the game, could not really make an impact.

Substitutes:

Green (Whelan, 46) - 7. Probably his best game for Ireland. One surprisingly adroit ball to McClean, and generally tidy.

Hoolahan (Long, 62) - 8. Again, showed an ability to take up intelligent positions in the final third, and would have benefited from linking with a more mobile and technical striker than the hapless Sammon. Took his goal with aplomb.

Hendrick (McCarthy, 71) - 7. Superb ball for Hoolahan to make it 2-0. Tidy, certainly one for the future.

Walters (Brady, 71) - 5. Unfair rating, as he is certainly not a winger, and did as much as he could under the circumstances.

Cox (McClean, 81), R. Keogh (Clark, 84) - not on long enough to be rated.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Ireland vs. Poland - Preview

Trapattoni's selection to play against Poland at Lansdowne Road tomorrow night is predictable enough, retaining the now-outmoded 4-4-2 formation with Conor Sammon making his début up front alongside Shane Long. David Forde starts in goal, with McShane, O'Shea, Clark and Cunningham across the backline, and Brady, McCarthy, Whelan and the beautifully coiffed James McClean (below) in midfield.

While the selections of Clark, Cunningham, McClean and Brady are quite positive in terms of developing players with potentially long-term usefulness, the persistence with two central strikers is a frustrating call, given that Wes Hoolahan - and the flexible 4-5-1 formation which he would enable - looks to be outside of Trapattoni's thoughts. Euro 2012 seemed to suggest that the 4-4-2 formation could be easily combated by teams pressing high up the pitch, forcing concession of the ball, and allowing numerical supremacy in the midfield area - supported by attacking full-backs - to set up attacking opportunities. Even in the qualifiers for that tournament, Russia, Armenia, Macedonia and Estonia enjoyed long periods of possession against Ireland by taking advantage of their greater midfield numbers, and the technically sound Swedish and Austrian teams will now look to do the same.

Trapattoni's two-pronged strike-force was initially employed to get the best from Robbie Keane, who compensated for his inability to play as a lone striker, or central playmaker, with commendable finishing ability when playing off a target man, borne out by his outstanding goalscoring record at this level. However, pure finishers like Keane (see also Andy Cole, Robbie Fowler and Michael Owen) are conspicuous by their absence in the modern game at the highest level - European forwards are expected to contribute to the build-up play, whether as ball-holders on the forward line or as link-men in the gap between the opposition's midfield/defensive lines. Keane, for all his qualities, can play neither role effectively, which, more than anything, forced him out the door at Liverpool and Spurs. With Keane in decline, and Wes Hoolahan looking like a huge asset as an attacking midfielder for Norwich, now is the perfect time for Ireland to catch up with the rest of Europe in adopting a more fluid midfield/attack dynamic. Trapattoni's selection of a Sammon-Long front two, with Long as a direct replacement for Keane, looks to be a stubborn persistence with a failing status quo.

Indeed, Ireland played a 4-5-1 against Germany - but utilising your extra midfielder as a man-marker alongside two 'sitters', leaving the lone striker isolated, and wide players hugging the touchline as auxiliary full-backs, is a system designed to lose games. European football has moved on, and Trapattoni seems stubborn in his refusal to follow suit. Irish football will be the loser, as another chance is wasted to develop and improve this Irish team before two crucial games.

Meanwhile, the Polish team has yet to be announced, but should contain a sizeable Bundesliga contingent, including top striker Robert Lewandowski and captain Jakub Blaszczykowski, both of the ever-impressive Borussia Dortmund, which should be a daunting prospect for an Irish team containing five players from the English second tier.

Irish XI to play Poland:

David Forde (Millwall)

Paul McShane (Hull)
John O'Shea (Sunderland)
Ciaran Clark (Aston Villa)
Greg Cunningham (Bristol City)

Robbie Brady (Hull)
Glenn Whelan (Stoke)
James McCarthy (Wigan)
James McClean (Sunderland)

Conor Sammon (Derby)
Shane Long (WBA)