What qualifies as a success though? Never in a million years will he achieve what Jack Charlton did, the pool of players is nowhere near good enough.He won't take the job anyway as he knows he'll be on a hiding to nothing, the spineless little tit. Besides, he's still waiting for Moyes to get the boot so he can finally get the job that he was destined for.
I found it soul-destroying that Shane Long was playing the role of big lad up-front against Sweden the other night. For a little guy he is superb at winning headers but that we were pinning our attacking hopes on that one "strategy" was lamentable.
Quote from: eamonn on September 12, 2013, 03:02:24 AMI found it soul-destroying that Shane Long was playing the role of big lad up-front against Sweden the other night. For a little guy he is superb at winning headers but that we were pinning our attacking hopes on that one "strategy" was lamentable.It reminded me of times when Taylor, or O Leary in his later days would try using JPA as a target man, despite the fact he was only 5,11ish and not very strong. That was also why he lost his place under Taylor, and O Leary started to run out of patience with him too. He just happened to be a very good header of the ball. I would guess O Neill would be more likely to find the closest thing he can to the next Niall Quinn and then play one of his smaller strikers alongside.
Quote from: supertom on September 12, 2013, 08:57:53 AMQuote from: eamonn on September 12, 2013, 03:02:24 AMI found it soul-destroying that Shane Long was playing the role of big lad up-front against Sweden the other night. For a little guy he is superb at winning headers but that we were pinning our attacking hopes on that one "strategy" was lamentable.It reminded me of times when Taylor, or O Leary in his later days would try using JPA as a target man, despite the fact he was only 5,11ish and not very strong. That was also why he lost his place under Taylor, and O Leary started to run out of patience with him too. He just happened to be a very good header of the ball. I would guess O Neill would be more likely to find the closest thing he can to the next Niall Quinn and then play one of his smaller strikers alongside.He is probably already looking for a loophole that would allow him to select Heskey.
How the f*ck did we manage to get 4 pages on this in less than 24 hours? It appears mention of his name on here = light the blue touch paper!
The FAI will approach Martin O’Neill in the next 48 hours to become manager of the Republic of Ireland and the former Celtic and Sunderland boss is willing to discuss terms to replace Giovanni Trapattoni whose five-year reign was ended by 'mutual consent' on Tuesday.The management committee of the FAI will convene next week to rubber-stamp the appointment of the 61-year-old Derry man who is their only choice to lead Ireland’s Euro 2016 campaign.With businessman Denis O’Brien on board for at least another two years to fund the wages of another high profile manager, the FAI are poised to make their move for the number one candidate.VIDEO Scroll down to watch Giovanni Trapattoni axed as Ireland managerTalks: Martin O'Neill is set to discuss terms with the FAI to become the next Republic of Ireland managerTheir hope is that O’Neill, who has been out of work since he was sacked by Sunderland in March, will be in place to pick the side to face Germany in Cologne before the final World Cup 2014 qualifier at home to Kazakhstan. Although the new manager will be without first choice centre-backs John O’Shea and Richard Dunne for the German game, they are optimistic he will take the job to go some way to filling the Aviva Stadium for the last competitive fixture until the Euro campaign starts next September.Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2418077/Martin-ONeill-FAIs-choice-replace-Giovanni-Trapattoni-Republic-Ireland-manager.html#ixzz2efpBkSvh