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Kenny- ‘Player Of The Month’ nominee. Who else in the squad deserves similar recognition?

SSE Airtrcity League Player Of The Month nominees were listed on Wednesday. The possible candidates include our very own Johnny Kenny, who has seriously impressed so far this season. Kenny has already scored 2 goals in his 9 appearances. We will all remember his very close attempt on Monday as we took on St Pats. Having only came off the bench a couple of minutes, his shot went wide of the netting by only inches. Although it was a real pity that he missed, he arguably put in more work in those few minutes off the bench than some did the entire game. I think a lot of us would agree that he deserved this recognition. Especially considering that this is his first professional season for the club and is certainly one of the hardest working players on the field. But who else deserved to be in the mix? Two in particular stand out to me….

Impressive signee

Jordan Gibson stands out as a first possible suggestion. Having signed from St Pats this season, he has seriously impressed. Not only with his goal-scoring success but with his overall play. Gibson has scored 3 goals for us so far; one being recognised as a potential goal of the season against Waterford, as he struck the ball into the top corner of the net. Gibson is an essential component of the starting 11 for every game and shows impressive link-up play up-front with Figueira, Parkes and Kenny. Gibson displays some serious footwork too and works extremely well under pressure when surrounded and cornered. He often is the go-to man for corners and free-kicks and rightly so. He has a brilliant ability to curl the ball at height providing good opportunity to catch defenders off – guard. This also creates potential for headers in the box.

His passing is tactically impressive also, he rarely lets the ball loose in the mid-field. He is a very fast player and is essential in keeping the tempo speed-driven. Gibson proves this by often being the key link between midfield passes and the assist that further leads to the goal. He steps up at pivotal moments in the games. Personally, I think he is one of the best signees this season and has seriously impacted the squad’s depth. He is a very flexible and adaptable player who isn’t restricted to going on the attack alone. His linkage and dribbling is as impressive as many mid-fielder’s.

Gibson (BIT O RED PHOTOGRAPHY)

Vital defender

John Mahon, the vital cog in the defensive line. This suggestion might not be as popular as Gibson. Defenders are typically under-rated and don’t get much attention excluding the rare moments where they essentially save their keeper. Only one defender is a nominee this month and that’s Shamrock Rover’s Liam Scales. Mahon is not short of recognition- winning Player of the Year 2018 while also remaining first choice defender since 2019. He also was called up for international time. We certainly have a solid defensive line going into this season between Mahon, Mc Court and Horgan. Mahon is the only of the three to have experience with the club, having come through our own academy system. You can tell he brings that security and confidence to the squad with this experience and familiarity to the club and ground.

While Mc Court and Horgan tend to press forward and involve themselves further into the mid-field, Mahon tends to stay closer to Mc Ginty and proves essential in this way. Just thinking back on the St Pats game for example, Forrester was left unmarked to run on the counter attack a couple of times. If it wasn’t for Mahon who remained pressed back, there could have been a couple more chances for the Saints.

Mahon is frequently cornered near the posts but manages to avoid giving away corners and close throw-ins and instead manages to boot the ball up-field. I think we can all admit that the power of a corner cannot be underestimated after Monday’s game. A lot of other defenders attempt to instead dribble past the attacker to escape, hoping to go on the counter attack. Mahon avoids this much riskier tactic which has led to some easily-avoidable goals in the past. Mahon is what a lot of commentators consider an ‘old fashioned defender’ who focuses mostly on clearances and tends to avoid playing out from the back. His sheer physicality and strength, despite his horrific injury, definitely benefits the defensive line.

Mahon blocks a St Pats attack (BIT O RED PHOTOGRAPHY)

Squad Leader

These two players have caught my eye as vital to the squad and to the success we have had so far. Both Gibson and Mahon rarely have an ‘off day’ compared to other players such as Parkes who has proven a hit-and- miss in recent games. Another player to possibly throw into the mix is Greg Bolger who has become a leader and commander within the squad. He physically orders and pushes the team on but also leads by example. This ‘leader’ role is something the club lacked last season and you can see the positive eff ect it has so far. The squad is much more driven and press much higher. Clever choices are more frequently made on time-management and the avoidance of fouls in particular circumstances. Bolger’s experience alone has proven only a benefit to the squad.

Bolger takes on his leadership role

The 6 nominees for the award are Graham Burke, Liam Scales, Ronan Coughlan, Chris Forrester, Johnny Kenny and Adam Foley. The results will be announced in coming days. It would seem likely Burke will scoop this one up after scoring successive goals, particularly his famed strike from the half-way line against Derry. We would love to see Kenny get this recognition, but he surely will be in the mix as a possibility for this and many more awards down the line, and has lots of time yet!

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Late equaliser cancels out Gibson penalty

Sligo Rovers drew 1-1 for the second time in a row to Drogheda United on Monday evening with a dramatic last-gasp header from Ian Bermingham ruling Jordan Gibson’s efforts in winning and converting a penalty early on in the second half somewhat worthless.

Liam Buckley lined up with an XI which harkened back to the earlier stages of the season, albeit with Mark Byrne making his first start of the season in place of Johnny Kenny. St Pats lined up with a familiar face for us, our top scorer last season, Ronan Coughlan started up top for the Saints.

Greg Bolger set the tone very early on with a crunching tackle in the first knockings, and this precedent was followed all through the match with both teams coming close in the first half, firstly through Bermingham whose diving header was well saved by Ed McGinty. Pats had another huge chance to score when Ronan Coughlan was put through by Chris Forrester’s through pass but Ed McGinty was alert to the chance and saved well. Rovers had a golden chance to score in the 19th minute after Greg Bolger’s intelligent pass fell to Romeo Parkes, who failed to trap the ball.

The Bit O’Red started the second half very well indeed, and were rewarded for their efforts in the 49th when Jordan Gibson became the devil to the Saints defence, decimating two defenders before getting cleared by Paddy Barrett. Having won the penalty, it was appropriate that he took it, and he was spot on to convert from twelve yards. Following this however, St Pats began to control the match, throwing more personnel forward and gaining chances on McGinty’s goal, but this inevitably left them exposed to counter-attacks. Johnny Kenny could’ve sealed St Pats’ fate with 7 minutes to go but his effort trickled just wide of the post. The Saints’ siege continued after this, with Shane Blaney giving a corner away from a cross in the 95th minute of 4 added minutes. In came the delivery, and it was the back of the net the ball nestled into to the agony of the Bit O’Red after their stoic defence became undone in a moment.

Now that that’s done and dusted, our next game will be against Dundalk, this time away from home on Friday the 7th. Check our socials for podcast updates, our YouTube for post-match livestreams and borst.ie for further report.

Teams

SLIGO ROVERS:  E McGinty, C Horgan, J Mahon, G Buckley, R McCourt, N Morahan (S Blaney 93), G Bolger, M Byrne (L Banks 79), J Gibson, R Parkes (J Kenny 79), W Figueira (D Cawley 93).

ST PATS: V Jaroš, I Bermingham, L Desmond, S Bone (D Burns 55), P Barrett (B McCormack 81), J Mountney, C Forrester, J Lennon (A Lewis 68), B King, M Smith, R Coughlan.

REF: Neil Doyle

Rovers Ratings

Ed McGinty: 6 – Played alright but he seemed to be scuffing his kicks.

Colm Horgan: 6 – Was decent on the right.

Garry Buckley: 6 – Solid in defence.

John Mahon: 6 – Did well to deny his former team-mate Coughlan in the first half.

Robbie McCourt: 6 – Fairly anonymous today.

Greg Bolger: 6 – Was good and physical today.

Niall Morahan: 6 – Like Bolger, was physical and played well.

Walter Figueira: 7 – Looked electric on the ball but wasn’t always brilliant with the end product.

Jordan Gibson: 8 – Was on it all game. Won and scored the penalty.

Romeo Parkes: 5 – Should’ve offered more today.

Mark Byrne: 6 – Looked to tire in the second half.

Lewis Banks: N/A – Liked his work on the right side though I was confused whether it was him or Horgan (or both??) as the designated right-back.

Johnny Kenny: N/A – Missed that huge chance late on but offered much more in 15 minutes up top than the rest of the players

David Cawley: N/A – Brought on to secure the three points. That didn’t come to ass, but he played alright.

Shane Blaney: N/A – Conceded the corner which Bermingham equalized from but he couldn’t have done much else.

After Match Reception

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A draw in Drogheda

Photo by James Fallon

Sligo Rovers drew 1-1 to Drogheda United in Head in the Game Park on Friday night with Chris Lyons and Johnny Kenny scoring the goals. The match was an interesting affair, with a plethora of chances for either side.

Wholesale changes (by our standards so far) were made from our defeat last time out when we hosted Derry, with Shane Blaney making his first start for the club in the place of David Cawley, and Lewis Banks deposing Colm Horgan at right back for this match. Niall Morahan was also ruled out after a late fitness test, with the youthful Cillian Heaney replacing him on the bench. Drogheda lined up with 1 change from their defeat to local rivals Dundalk, with Mark Doyle replacing Hugh Douglas. Ronan Murray, a former Rovers man of course, lined up for the Claret and Blue Army too.

The first half was a captivating affair, with both teams at each-others throats from the off. However, it was Drogheda who drew first blood, with Ed McGinty at fault, coming out too far for a free-kick he couldn’t win, the resulting header falling to Chris Lyons who struck home. The Bit O’Red were unperturbed by this however, and equalised through Johnny Kenny after a nice vertical pass from Garry Buckley found Walter Figueira, whose shot was too hot for Colin McCabe to handle, which allowed Johnny Kenny to poke home from about 1 yard out (crazy far out, I know). Rovers continued to lay siege on McCabe’s goal through Romeo Parkes and John Mahon before half-time.

The second half was a more tense encounter than what had preceded it in the first period, with less chances falling Rovers’ way. Drogheda took the game by the scruff of the neck with some huge chances to score through Killian Phillips but the youngster couldn’t find the net. Rovers resorted to attempting to hit on the break, with the substitution of Romeo Parkes for Ryan De Vries an effort to facilitate this. In the end, the game ended honours even, with 1 goal apiece.

Thanks for reading. Our next match is against the high-flying St Pats on Monday evening at a quarter to 6. See you afterwards on the BORST YouTube channel for a post-match rundown and for my report on the proceedings right here on borst.ie.

Teams

SLIGO ROVERS:  E McGinty, L Banks, J Mahon, G Buckley, R McCourt, D Cawley, G Bolger, N Morahan, J Gibson, R Parkes (R De Vries 80), J Kenny.

DROGHEDA UNITED: C McCabe, J Brown, D Massey, R O’Shea, D O’Reilly, G Deegan, D Markey, R Murray (J Clarke 72), M Doyle (L Heeney 52), K Phillips, C Lyons.

REF: Robert Harvey

Rovers Ratings

Ed McGinty: 5 – Looked shaky and dare I say, unreliable in nets today.

Lewis Banks: 6 – A good performance in his first start.

Garry Buckley: 6 – Did decent at the back – nothing more to say really.

John Mahon: 6 – Solid enough, nearly scored before half-time from a corner.

Robbie McCourt: 6 – Another good display for a consistently good player.

Greg Bolger: 6 – Good good good – that’s all.

Shane Blaney: 6 – A very good debut for the club despite his yellow card.

Walter Figueira: 7 – Played really well, with some nice flicks on show.

Jordan Gibson: 7 – Danced and weaved through the defence at times.

Romeo Parkes: 7 – He was unlucky with some of his attempts in the first half.

Johnny Kenny: 7 – Wasn’t involved in the second half but got us that all-important equalizer.

Ryan De Vries: N/A – Got involved in his limited time on the pitch.

After Match Reception

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From a 3-1 victory to a 1-0 loss, a once off or a new habit?

Patching scores a penalty resulting in a 1-0 victory for the Candystripes. (Eoin Nonnan).

We highly impressed on 20th April, with a 3-1 victory over Bohs playing away from home. Jordan Gibson volleyed the ball into the net following impressive play as Parkes and Kenny linked the ball up-field. Mark Byrne scored his first professional goal for the club having been taken on as a substitute. David Cawley followed suit leaving the bench and scoring our 3rd goal. Both teams had periods of domination and possession. Rovers played with a fast tempo and pressed high on the attack for the majority of the game. Our defensive line was probably the strongest it’s been yet, as Horgan and Mahon particularly cleared dangerous balls.

Points but not performance

Liam Buckley has admitted on several occasions that although he was ‘delighted with the points’, he didn’t feel performance was up to standard. This was particularly evident as we took on Waterford. He was underwhelmed by the team’s performance in their 2-1 victory at the RSC, despite having come from behind with wonder goals from Parkes and Gibson sealing all three points. Buckley summarised the opening games ‘Our general play was nowhere near up to scratch’.

A victory to Longford and a draw with Shamrock Rovers followed. Although a draw with 2020 Champions was impressive, the game was reasonably equal and little chances were made. Buckley admitted there ‘really wasn’t much to the game’. Points were gained but Buckley remained reasonably unimpressed. That was until the victory to Bohs, where he claimed ‘we worked extremely hard and all our goals were top class’. This win stood out , ‘We’ve shown a bit of character’.

Mark Byrne celebrates his first senior goal with Kenny

Buckley was the most satisfied he had been all season, and supporters were highly impressed having being undefeated so far. However, 4 days later the same team suffered a 1-0 loss to Derry City , who were and still are scrapping the bottom of the League table. This game had felt a guaranteed or ‘safe win’ according to many supporters. What went wrong to go from a 3-1 victory to a 1-0 loss to the tables bottom team?

Similar starting squad

In terms of the starting 11, Buckley has nearly always used the same first squad. He also makes use of subs sparingly. He tends to make the right choices, so far subs Kenny, Cawley and Byrne have scored coming off the bench. It is important to note that the Bohs side we played had made 5 changes to their starting squad. Derry on the other hand came onto the pitch with a familiar starting 11. Whether or not this could’ve made a difference is questionable. Surely a team with the same starting 11 they’ve used all season are more secure than a drastically changed starting squad? Without doubt, our first team have quickly gelled this season. Particularly on the attack with link-up play between Parkes, Kenny and Gibson proving impressive. We made use of only 3 subs in the Bohs game, with 2 of them scoring. In contrast we made 5 changes in the Derry game.

The dreaded penalty

We always have to factor in the ref in these games. Neil Doyle refereed for the Bohs game with John Mc Laughlin supervising the Derry game. Mc Laughlin is typically considered one of the ‘stricter’ refs, who tends to give away ‘easy’ free-kicks, cards etc. The loss at Derry came solely from a penalty given to the Candystripes early into the second half. Mahon was claimed to have tripped Parkhouse in the box, leaving Patching to take the penalty and score. There was controversy over this penalty as the tackle did not look particularly rough and seemed unavoidable in the crowded box. Mahon is one our most experienced defenders, and if this was a once-off slip up, we can surely move past it?

Mahons tackle resulting in a penalty (BITORED PHOTOGRAPHY).

A slow tempo

There were chances early on in both games but the tempo of the Bohs game did not follow suit as we took on Derry. As guest commentator Joey N’do explained, Derry controlled the game. The tempo was kept at their pace, with regular fouls allowing Derry to use-up valuable time. The Bohs game was intense from the get-go and was an extremely entertaining game to watch. Derry on the other side started a little quieter. After the first 20 minutes our tempo came to a halt. The game at times was stalemate. It is fair to say that the game was equal in performance and a draw would’ve been a fair result.

Is it fair to completely blame our loss on this penalty? We have come from behind before this season, and there were practically no attempts to salvage a draw. Rover’s first shot on target happened on the 89th minute, from distance, which just proves our attack was seriously lacking.

Fatigue

Could fatigue be blamed for the loss? Rovers had already played a game that Tuesday. 3 games in seven days with the same starting first team may explain the slow tempo and lack of energy/drive. But playing a series of successive matches is something the team will face again and need to be prepared for. This will be particularly important with two big upcoming games, St Pats on May 3rd and Dundalk on May 7th.

David Cawley

A once off?

Was this loss to the bottom-of-the-table team a once off or is it something you can see happening again after a period of going undefeated? It was our first time losing at all this season, which has to be expected at some stage. Was it better to lose to Derry and win to Bohs, or have lost to Bohs and won the lower Derry side? Surely beating the Dublin team higher in the table was more impressive?

Whether it was a bad decision by the referee, a dodgy tackle in the box, fatigue or just pure bad luck, it was our first defeat all season. Hopefully this is not something we repeat again especially with more dominant sides. A lot of LOI fans argue that the loss means us supporters were too naive to claim we were in the title chase so early. But can one defeat to a penalty really prove that?
As Buckley said the squad is pressing higher this season, has more depth and is working extremely hard. Us supporters will hope that this was a once off slip up. Although this may have affected the squads confidence, we hopefully still look threatening going ahead and aim to be the side to beat.

We take on Drogheda this Friday, a side fresh out of the First Division. However, they have impressed over-all, sitting in 5th place. A loss to this side could slowly see us slip down the table further.

What do you all think?

A once off mistake or the start of a slower tempo side who will struggle in the next few games?

Sligo Rovers squad vs Derry (BITOREDPHOTOGRAPHY)
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New manager bounce sees Derry past lacklustre Rovers

Sligo Rovers succumbed to a 1-0 defeat to Derry City in their first game under new boss Ruaidhri Higgins. A Will Patching penalty from a John Mahon tackle early on in the second half secured victory for the boys from the Brandywell.

One change only today (who would’ve thought?), and it was an enforced one, with Liam Buckley choosing club captain David Cawley to replace Walter Figueira, who came off injured against Bohemians. A very familiar face round these parts will be returning to the Showgrounds, albeit in the Candystripes’ dugout, with Raf Cretaro being taken on by Ruaidhri Higgins for his coaching setup. The new man also made only one change, with Will Patching replacing Daniel Lafferty.

The first half of the match wasn’t packed with goalscoring chances in any means but it was an interesting affair all the same, with the best bit of play coming around half an hour in, with some beautiful interplay between Romeo Parkes, Johnny Kenny and Jordan Gibson leading to a chance which was smothered by Gartside in the Derry goal.

Robbie McCourt had to be replaced by Regan Donelon at half time due to a knock he suffered late in the first half, but the second half he entered was a poor showing for Rovers from start to finish, with a soft penalty given against John Mahon, who was adjudged by referee John McLaughlin to have tripped David Parkhouse in the box after a whipped free-kick. Will Will Patching score? The answer was yes, as he made no mistake from the spot, deceiving Ed McGinty during the runup to slot home. The Bit O’Red never looked like kicking on during the game, even after the concession of the goal, and with the substitutions of Mark Byrne, Darren Gibson and Ryan De Vries for Romeo Parkes, Jordan Gibson and Johnny Kenny respectively. In the end, Derry kept solid and only allowed a solitary effort on goal, a wild Mahon effort with about 3 minutes to go.

I think the only positive from that game was Joey N’Do on commentary if I’m honest. Anyways, next up is the fresh outta First Division Drogheda United next Friday. Join me then for another report.

Teams

SLIGO ROVERS:  E McGinty, C Horgan, J Mahon, G Buckley, R McCourt (R Donelon 46), D Cawley, G Bolger, N Morahan (L Banks 67), J Gibson (D Collins 80), R Parkes (M Byrne 67), J Kenny (R De Vries 80).

DERRY CITY:  N Gartside, R Boyce, E Toal, C McJannett, C Coll (D Lafferty 72), C Harkin, J Malone (J Thomson 62), W Patching, W Fitzgerald, J Akintunde, D Parkhouse (B Barr 80).

REF: John McLaughlin

Rovers Ratings

Ed McGinty: 6 – Swept and distributed well. Unlucky with the penalty.

Colm Horgan: 6 – Wasn’t good, wasn’t bad.

Garry Buckley: 6 – Did ok in defence but wasn’t sure when he stepped into midfield, although that could’ve been because of the knock he got midway through the second half.

John Mahon: 5 – Conceded the penalty (which was harsh in my opinion) and didn’t inspire after that.

Robbie McCourt: 6 – Came off at half time, so he couldn’t stamp his authority on the match.

Greg Bolger: 6 – Did all he could but it wasn’t enough.

Niall Morahan: 6 – Was decent but not in any way terrific. Taken off for Banks halfway into the second half.

David Cawley: 6 – I haven’t seen him as the highest midfielder in the 3 long enough to form an opinion that isn’t reactionary, but I do think he and the team would be better served deeper.

Jordan Gibson: 5 – Couldn’t work his way through the Derry defence today. Replaced by Collins after 80 minutes.

Romeo Parkes: 6 – Didn’t get going today, I think he play better leading the line as opposed to out wide. Came off for Mark Byrne on 67 minutes.

Johnny Kenny: 6 – The ball wasn’t given to him at all really. Hooked for De Vries with 10 minutes to go.

Regan Donelon: 6 – His first competitive minutes this season were decent.

Lewis Banks: 6 – Don’t know why he was centre-back instead of full-back but I won’t complain since he had a serviceable cameo.

Mark Byrne: 6 – Wasn’t spotted at all on the left side.

Darren Collins: N/A – Didn’t get enough time for me to rate him.

Ryan De Vries: N/A – (ctrl+c, ctrl+v) Didn’t get enough time for me to rate him.

After Match Reception

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The People Have The Power….

The people have the power.
All we have to do is awaken
The power in the people.

John Lennon

In Okinawan Japanese there is a word Ikigai, meaning “the reason for which you wake up in the morning” your “sense of purpose”. The advances of the European Super League awoken a powerful Ikigai sweeping through Liverpool, London and Manchester, football fans stood shoulder to shoulder to push back the greed and power of the mighty, uniting the clans for one Love. The love of the people’s game. Neither colour race nor creed, club loyalty or crest adored would allow the elite to steal the poor man’s game for the rich mans of profit.

People power prevailed.

For now, the finger is in the European Super League dyke. 

As LOI fans we looked on in shock, how can these rich owners just decide to sell out on tradition and history to set up a member only franchise and never even consult the very fans the club exists for. 

How dare they says you. And dare they do and will again.

We have a history of such an attempted power grab on our own shores. Roll back to the year 2007 when Fintan Drury, who headed up the Irish end of the British-based sports agency Platinum One, began work on a business plan to set up an All-Ireland league. 

September 2005 saw the publication of the Genesis report (an independent report into the operation of the national league) commissioned by the FAI prior to the official takeover of the league. This report includes recommendations for the reorganisation of the national football league, highlighting inadequate and outdated stadium infrastructures, low level of total sports sponsorship market (1%), the poor state of club finances (a collective debt €3,000000), poor marketing & inadequate media coverage.

So, in this report Platinum One was handed the failings of the league on a plate and could now use the same short fallings to promote an All-Ireland league. 

Was it strategic opportunism by Platinum One examining the spoils of a dysfunctional league and deciding whether the time was right to pick up the debris or leave it sit and return to it another time? 

The timing was right to scavenge.

In 2005 Shamrock were relegated after a promotion/relegation play off with Dublin City F.C, a club with 107 years of history demoted to the first division graveyard, by a club in existence less than 5 years.

July 2006 Saw Dublin City withdraw from the league with debts of €1.5 million (€1 million owed to its owner Ronan Seery). The knock-on effect was Derry City regained the points they dropped against Dublin City and closed the gap on Shelbourne. 

Shelbourne would go on to win the league on the last day ,but would later be relegated for financial irregularities, failing to pay a tax bill of €104,000, and throughout the season struggled to meet players wages. The club’s alternative was to attempt to sell Tolka Park in 2006 for an estimated price of €30 million.

2006 also saw Bohemians deducted 3 points after fielding a suspended Jason McGuiness in one of their games. Waterford United were to remain in the League of Ireland Premier Division, despite being beaten in the play-offs by Dundalk, who were deemed not to have met the criteria set out but the FAI’s Independent Assessment Group and therefore were denied promotion.

The FAI’s new league was decided by an Independent Assessment Group (IAG) which was supposed to allay fears of FAI bias.  Those fears were not allayed.  All clubs were to make presentations to the league which could take any form once sufficient documentation was provided.  

In 2006 the FAI backed a scheme to get the four big Dublin clubs to ground share, Shelbourne with Bohemians at Dalymount and Shamrocks with St. Patricks Athletic in Tallaght. 

At Bohemians, there was a realisation that the only serious options for the club was to allow Shelbourne in, or to sell up and move to the suburbs. In the preceding year Bohemians had lost €720,000 while Shelbourne reportedly had lost €940,000. Dalymount required and enormous amount of work and even with the combined reserves of both clubs they would not be able to deliver on a high-quality stadium. Dalymount was estimated with a real estate value varying from €30 million to around twice that. Some fans argued that selling up and using the cash to establish a new stadium and training facilities in the suburbs made more sense.

Bohemians had a buyer for Dalymount in Danninger Ltd. In a deal worth €60 million and they would move to a new 10,000-seater stadium in Harristown and pocket €40 million. But the club also had an earlier agreement with Albion properties (who had already handed over a significant amount of money) to sell part of the ground to them. It ended up in the high court and the case over the sale went against Bohemians. Danninger Ltd later pulled out of the deal and Bohemians had to secure a €4m debt to Zurich Bank was secured against the carpark.

Shelbourne was an absolute basket case. Stripped of the Premier Division title, thrown out of Europe and demoted to the First Division, Shelbourne were dealt a further blow by auditors, who reported that the club failed to keep proper accounts.

A sum in excess of €600,000 was unaccounted for in the books of Accolade Ltd, the company behind Shelbourne FC, and the Companies Registration Office was notified of a failure to keep proper books “in respect of all income and expenditures”.

The finances of St Patricks Athletic were not much better and a sale of Richmond Park estimated at €26 million seemed the only option to pay those who had loaned substantial amounts to the club could be repaid. Gerry Mulvey at the time was a 50% stakeholder in St. Pats and had spent €635,000 on his stake in the club.

Down south Cork City were no better off and the then owner Brain Lennox made it clear in October 2006 that the club would not survive 12 months without substantial outside investment. Cork had just won the league in 2005 and were now slowly sinking out of business with debts reported to be around €800,000.

So, three of the Dublin big 4 were flat broke and the previous year’s league champions were sinking fast. The league was totally F*****D.

So, from all this you can see the league was a complete shit show, clubs were millions in debt, refused licensing to participate in the premier league, the league champions stripped of their title, kicked out of Europe, demoted, possible no ground to play in and some clubs having to go out of business.

The future seemed bleak, and that’s putting it mildly.

We had multimillion euro turnover businesses being run like market stalls. 

The clubs crashed and burned, poured petrol on the flames, and just kept pouring. 

The vultures were circling. Was it good timing or was it just pure opportunism for a new business proposal for these ailing clubs?

So, let’s get back to Platinum One and it proposed All Ireland League.

The first stages to develop an All-Ireland league began in late 2006 with the proposed starting date of an All-Ireland League 2009.

In October 2007 it emerged that, in addition to preliminary work by some Southern clubs to explore the possibility of establishing a 32-county topflight, a second, apparently more advanced, process was under way.

Fintan Drury, who headed up the Irish end of the British-based sports agency Platinum One also was an adviser to St Patrick’s Athletic owner Garrett Kelleher, had been working on a business plan for a league involving the leading clubs from both sides of the Border.

Former Derry City managing director Jim Roddy, was to work on the process, held meetings with representatives of clubs as well as several politicians to gauge support for the new league.

This second initiative was the product of five meetings held in Dublin over the previous two months. Most have been held in the IFSC offices of Arkaga, the company that owned Cork City, and initially the group was limited to a few of the League of Ireland’s big clubs but has been steadily expanding.

Garrett Kelleher (who’s business just happened to be advised by the owner of the private company trying to form an All-Ireland League) bought out Gerry Mulvey’s 50% stake and some others smaller shares in St. Pats in June 2007 now owning 60% shares in the club. Maybe this was just coincidence that a millionaire property developer was willing to invest a lot of finance into a business that was unable to generate enough revenue to cover its expenses around the time of advances in an All-Ireland League.

In 2007 also the Arkaga fund took ownership of Cork City, with Brian Lennox selling the club.

Arkaga, founded by Irishman Gerard Walsh, were a private equity fund that invest principally in the healthcare, technology, property, media and leisure sectors. They are also engaged in stocks and real estate. So why would you invest in a Football club with losses of €800,000? Again all this around the time of a possible All Ireland League!!

So now two basket case clubs have been bought in the same year by investors who have ties to Platinum One!

March 2008 sees Platinum One state they want a “franchise” from Limerick included in the 10-team competition. This team in Limerick at the time was Limerick 37 only two-years in existence and owned by Irish American businessman Jack McCarthy. However, it was not clear if the “franchise” would be offered to Limerick 37. 

So now 9 teams (majority private owned) had practically been assured of their places Drogheda United, Bohemians, St Patrick’s Athletic, Cork City, Galway United, Shamrock Rovers, Derry City, Linfield and Glentoran. This is not to say they all agreed but had all shown willingness to participate. 

Yes, you probably have noticed Sligo Rovers were excluded.

Support from governments in both jurisdictions was given a boost to the AIL organisers and went as far as the then finance minister Brian Cowen meeting with Fintan Drury and Jim Roddy.

However, although Platinum One had clubs and some government support for the plan, if clubs wanted to pursue this format, it had to be sanctioned by both national associations and then by UEFA.

And so, sounds the death knell to the AIL with both associations rejecting the proposal. 

September 2008 saw Platinum abandon its plan for an All-Ireland “Super League”.

Reflecting on the recent European Super League (ESL) we can see similarities to that of Platinum Ones: Crisis, Profiteering and Exclusion.

The word crisis comes from the Greek “to separate, to sift” which means to pass judgement, to keep only what is worthwhile.

So, Platinum One had sifted through the islands clubs and kept wat was worthwhile to make up the AIL. But what about Sligo Rovers, Waterford, Dundalk, Finn Harps etc. Clubs engrained in the community and years of history and tradition. Was it coincidence many of these clubs were fan owned and fan run at the time to be excluded? 

Big business see crisis as opportunity, vultures circling their prey just watching them get weaker and weaker, their prey cling to any hope of salvation but then it appears as a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

Was the All -Ireland league really concerned with providing a full-time professional league with modern state of the art facilities to attract fans to the grounds or were they only interested in the sporting industry which continues to be one of the most dominant players in media and entertainment. 

Advertisers flock and capitalize on the eyeballs that sports receive and use it as a prime marketing opportunity. Between sponsorships, in-stadium advertising and ads run during events, brands have many opportunities to make their presence known. 

So, for now the ESL may be parked, but let history on this island serve to prove its not gone away and will return in another guises, now they realise the issues they face to push it through. In 2008 Platinum One abandoned the AIL but move on to 2019 and the emergence of the All-Island League (fronted by Kieran Lucid). This new proposal has put flesh on the bones engaging the services of Dutch sports data consultancy Hypercube in October 2019, with a view to exploring the possibilities of cross-border competition on the island of Ireland

It had backing of the FAI and many clubs. 

Again, a new venture initially was not set to involve the national associations.

All-Island League proposals are on hold because of Covid-19 but the pandemic could serve as a reminder of the vulnerability of professional football in Ireland.

Kieran Lucid spoke with Club Owners, FAI and IFA and governments both sides of the border, but when were  the fans directly consulted . And her lies the very issue. These multi-millionaire backers do not see fans as important stakeholders, just a customer to pay for the product. 

It took the power of the masses in the UK to say Halt to the ESL, the fans of private company ownership with no say or representation on their board that affect their club decision making. These owners believe in asking for forgiveness rather than asking for permission. They look upon fans as customers and not as the very existence for the clubs being. It should not be the dream of football supporters to be involved in their club’s decision making, it should their right. 

Fans must be valued by the club they support, not milked like “cash cows”.

Our own LOI supporters need to take this warning of the ESL to reflect on their influence and representation in their club’s decision making. We saw Cork City fold after Arkaga had gambled everything on the proposed All-Ireland League, leaving their mess to be cleaned up by the fans. Drogheda were also in a similar situation entering examinership in 2008.

Dundalk with billionaire owners attracted to a loss-making football club on the outpost of Europe. Why? Could it be for the prospect of lucrative All island league and like the ESL, fans will know nothing of what is happening to their club until their the the ones left top pick up the pieces if it all crumbles. 

Their needs to be a movement in our league by fans to mobilise and organise under a fans umbrella as one collective voice. A voice that will be strong enough for owners to realise fans consultation is a necessity, a voice which can be heard not only in the league but also in government. A body that needs to be recognised by the government supported and funded if required to do so. In any discussion on the AIL their needs to be a fans stakeholder group, and all information fed down to the clubs’ supporters and consultation with all club’s supporters.

The people have the power.

All we have to do is awaken

The power in the people.

John Lennon

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Destruction in Dalymount

Gibson who finished with conviction…

Photography by James Fallon

Bohemians were no match for Sligo Rovers’ firepower up top on Tuesday night, with Jordan Gibson and two of Liam Buckley’s substitutes; Mark Byrne and David Cawley on target for the Bit O’Red. It wasn’t all smooth sailing for the Sligo boys however, as Liam Burt showed when he struck home with aplomb from 25 yards.

It was a side you could have guessed which started the game in Dalymount, with only one change from our last game against Finn Harps. Can you guess it? Of course, it was Ryan De Vries making way for our academy graduate turned starter, Johnny Kenny. Bohemians also made 5 changes from their previous game against Waterford last Friday.

The first knockings of the opening period set the tone for the rest of the clash, with huge chances for both teams to score in the founding moments through Georgie Kelly, his strike saved well by Ed McGinty in nets. Johnny Kenny could’ve broken the fragile deadlock soon after when he found himself with the ball at his feet close to James Talbot’s net, but the young Gypsy was equal to Kenny’s effort. The game continued in end-to-end fashion until Kenny again received the ball in the box, this time hitting the crossbar from close to 20 yards from goal. The breakthrough was to come our way on the half-hour mark, with Kenny once again involved in slipping a crisp through ball to Romeo Parkes, who did well to cross to Jordan Gibson who finished with conviction.

The second half started in the worst possible way for the Bit O’Red, with Liam Burt rifling home from outside the box with a sumptuous curling effort. This goal was to be the turning point in the match, with Bohemians finding new belief and pressing high up the pitch. Despite this, Rovers held firm and were able to find success when a hopeful cross was flicked on by the ever-present Kenny into Mark Byrne’s path, who calmly slotted home to net his first senior goal for the club. This was a tough blow for Bohs, who came back swinging and had a gilt-edged chance to score through Keith Ward after an Ed McGinty parry led to a virtually open net, which he missed to level the game. The Bit O’Red switched on and showed their ruthlessness after this chance, with David Cawley striking into the the near corner in some style.

I need an editor, seriously; again I offermy apologies for forgetting to change Ryan De Vries’ rating from the Shams game. Anyways, we’ll see you next time for Friday’s match against Derry City, if you can get past these rookie mistakes.

Teams

SLIGO ROVERS:  E McGinty, C Horgan (L Banks 86), J Mahon, G Buckley, R McCourt, J Gibson, G Bolger, N Morahan, W Figueira (M Byrne 59), R Parkes (D Cawley 81), J Kenny.

BOHEMIANS:  J Talbot, C Kelly, R Cornwall, R Feely, A Breslin, R Tierney (K Ward 81), C Levingston (A Coote 81), J Moylan, D Devoy, L Burt, G Kelly (P Omochere 71).

REF: Neil Doyle

Rovers Ratings

Ed McGinty: 8 – Made some giant saves today and was decisive in his area.

Colm Horgan: 7 – Was more defensively rather than offensively minded today but he did his job well. Taken off for Banks late on.

Garry Buckley: 6 – Another solid performance.

John Mahon: 7 – Was needed today and stepped up.

Robbie McCourt: 6 – A good performance from a player very quickly settling in.

Greg Bolger: 6 – A solid performance capped off with a late assist. Not much more to say other than he did the dirty work for the team.

Niall Morahan: 6 – Was very tenacious in midfield today.

Walter Figueira: 6 – Came off injured. Hopefully he gets back soon since he’s had a bug upturn in form.

Jordan Gibson: 7 – Tucked away his golazo very well.

Romeo Parkes: 7 – Did really well for the first goal.

Johnny Kenny: 8 – The latest Arrow Harps alumnus produces on the big stage again. What a prestigious production line at that club (not biased I swear).

Mark Byrne: 7 – Comes on and scores. The kid’s a star.

David Cawley: 8 – What a strike. What more can I say?

Lewis Banks: N/A – Good to see him back.

After Match Reception

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Sligo Rovers’ Academy producing pivotol players

Johnny Kenny

17- year old Johnny Kenny’s winning goal against Finn Harps exemplifies the product of Sligo Rovers underage academy system. Kenny is a brilliant example of a young player who rose through the ranks, signing his first professional contract for the club this January. He played for his schools side- Coola Post Primary School while also playing for his local club- Arrow Harps. Kenny went on to join Rovers U-17 team, making a big impression in recent years. This culminated in Kenny being the top scorer in the U-17 Airtricity League, having racked up 17 goals in 8 games. Having progressed to the U-19 team, he proved pivotal scoring two goals in the Shield Semi-final and four in the Final.

Johnny Kenny scores his first professional goal (Credit: Bit O Red Photography).

After signing professionally for the Bit O’ Red this season, Kenny was highly involved during pre-season friendlies. He impressed scoring a series of consecutive goals. This created a remarkable reputation as a potential goal-scorer for the club. Kenny was part of the first-team squad for every game so far this season and was taken off the bench for the game in which he scored his first ever professional goal on 17th April . Rovers’ are not necessarily short of goals, but there is a void in the position of go-to goalscorer. This is particularly evident this season as the attacking line has drastically changed. The forward-line altered having lost both Junior and Coughlan this season. Instead Figeuira, Kenny and Gibson signed, as Parkes returned.

No.1 Academy graduate

Kenny is not the only impressive academy graduate to prove pivotal to the Sligo Rovers squad. Goalkeeper Ed Mc Ginty also came through the ranks. Mc Ginty played every minute of every game during the compressed 2020 season. He is often recognised as one of the League’s most skilled keepers. The young keeper gained international recognition as he was called up to play with the Ireland U-21 squad. Mc Ginty has been nominated for Sligo Rovers ‘Player of the year 2020’, after being recognised as ‘Man Of The Match’ on several occassions. Mc Ginty originally hails from Scotland and gained under-age experience with both Celtic and Hibernia.

After moving to Ballyshannon as a teenager, Mc Ginty joined Rovers’ U-19 ranks. Throughout this period, he was involved with the senior squad pre-season friendlies. Ed began his professional debut in 2017 and continues to wear the No.1 jersey since the 2019/2020 season. He has now established himself as first choice keeper. Mc Ginty has signed a further 2 year contract with the club in November 2020. He explains he is willing to ‘commit long term to the club’ and ‘is just getting started’.

Ed Mc Ginty (The Sun).

Local talent

Collooney native John Mahon began his football career with experience at his local club- Ballisodare United. Mahon quickly progressed from Rovers’ U-17 side to training with the U-19 side. Mahon began his professional career with the club in 2017 and remains a key link in the solid defensive line. Having been awarded ‘Young Player of the Year’ for the club in 2018, he remained first-choice defender throughout 2019.

Mahon has played over 60 matches for Rovers despite being ruled out for 8 months due to a broken leg. The Sligo native’s progress has not gone unnoticed as he was called into the U-21 Ireland camp in 2019. Both Celtic and Rangers were interested in the defender alongside Blackburn Rovers and Derby County. Mahon is noted for his physicality and talent in the defensive role. Mahon has also signed a 2 year contract for the Bit O’ Red in 2020, claiming that he ‘wants to get to the next level’. Liam Buckley admits ‘ he has a fantastic career ahead of him’.

Sligo native John Mahon

Player of the season

Midfielder Niall Morahan, who was awarded Sligo Rovers Player of the season 2020, also progressed through the under-age system in place at The Showgrounds. Leitrim native Morahan began training withSligo Rovers U-17 side in 2015. In 2018 he stepped up to the club’s U-19 side and also made his professional debut this year. In August 2019 Niall signed a long term deal with Rovers via Sligo IT’s sports scholarship programme. Morahan extended his contract in October 2020. Niall explains the benefits of coming through the youth system, noting that it prepares you to ‘be up to speed with the intensity and physical demands of the league’.

Although Morahan was utilised at right-back early in his professional football career , he is now being positioned in the middle of the pitch, which he prefers. Morahan also gained an international name in 2019 having been called up for the U-19 Ireland side. Morahan has been a notable midfielder on the first-team throughout the 2020 season. Heading into this season, he has been recognised for his impressive passing and linkage play. Several other players on the first-team squad have graduated from the under-age system, but are yet to join the starting 11.

Niall Morahan Player of the year 2020

Next generation

Sligo Rovers currently have five academy teams playing in the League of Ireland National Underage Leagues. The youngest team, the U-13 side, have played two seasons and are managed by Alan Farry with the assistance of Kieran Brick. Throughout 2021, this age group will be changed to U-14 meaning even more potential players can train with the team. The U-15 side managed to top their group in Phase One last season and are highly competitive. The success of this side is owed to coaches/managers Marcel Gordon, Paul Materson and Conor O’ Grady. The U-17 side, under the management of Ryan Casey, finished the 2020 season strong also. The final academy group, the U-19s, compete in the Under-19 Shield Competition and are highly competitive.
Sligo Rovers also hold a competitive season with their under-age women’s side. The team have played against challenging sides such as Shamrock Rovers and Champions Peamount United. Therefore, the potential lies for a future Sligo Rovers senior womens’ team.

Sligo Rovers U-17 women’s team


Without doubt, Sligo Rovers under-age academies have played a pivotal role throughout the years. The system continues to do so, having integrated young players into the senior squad as professional athletes. This of course is the ultimate goal of the academy. Coaches, managers and all involved in the academies have much to be proud of. The after-product of the system proves highly successful. Many League of Ireland supporters admire this system, preferring to see locals rise through the ranks, as supposed to continuously signing players from abroad, while losing our own to foreign teams. The academies at The Showgrounds continue to provide pivotal players to the senior Sligo Rovers squad and are sure to foster talent and develop the future players of our club.

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Stylish second half ensures win after cagey opening

Rovers 1-0 Harps

Sligo Rovers ended up 1-0 victors over our local frenemies Finn Harps after a stagnant first half gave way to a refreshing, exciting second period, with Johnny Kenny getting off the mark for senior competitive goals in the 49th minute after his doggedness in pressing the opposing defence led to a tap-in. Rovers dominated the clash after this and could’ve scored more through Walter Figueira and Jordan Gibson, but it was Robbie McCourt who secured the three points with a vital interception on Sean Boyd inside the box in the 90th minute.

I could nearly copy & paste this paragraph from the Shams match, but only nearly. Liam Buckley used the side which ended the match against the fake Rovers from the start against Finn Harps, with our number 9, Ryan De Vries, taking Johnny Kenny’s place in the number 9 position. Our Ballybofey neighbours remained unchanged from their previous win against Waterford, with our former defender/midfielder Will Seymore remaining in the side.

The first half was admittedly, very boring, with one major chance through Romeo Parkes, whose attempted dink was saved well by Mark McGinley in the Harps net on 36 minutes after a long ball over the top. Apart from that fleeting moment, the half was fairly inert apart from a yellow card for Robbie McCourt, with Finn Harps content to play their defensive game drilled into them by Ollie Horgan and his coaching team.

As was the case in our last game, Ryan De Vries and Johnny Kenny were involved in a half-time substitution, but this time, it was Ryan De Vries making way for the 17-year-old. His introduction to the match signalled a paradigm shift in the match, injecting pace and impetus into a previously still fixture, and it was the young Riverstonian who pressed Mark McGinley into making a crucial error to allow him to tap in from point-blank range. The Bit O’Red controlled proceedings from then on, having some big chances through Figueira and McCourt on the left hand side who each had shots well saved. The match looked set and done from then until the beginning of added time, where a Finn Harps counter-attack allowed a cross into the box where Sean Boyd lurked, however this attack was halted by Robbie McCourt who had put in the hard yards to get back, who marshalled the ball safely into Ed McGinty’s hands.

Bohs at home this Sunday, how did I end up saying that? My apologies for that horrific error in the last report, now our next game is Bohs away from home on Tuesday. See you then for another report.

Teams

SLIGO ROVERS:  E McGinty, C Horgan, J Mahon, G Buckley, R McCourt, J Gibson, G Bolger, N Morahan, W Figueira, R Parkes (D Cawley 78), R De Vries (J Kenny 45).

FINN HARPS:  M McGinley, D Webster, E Boyle (S Doherty 69), K Sadiki, S McEleney, M Russell (R Shanley 69), K O’Sullivan (S Boyd 83), W Seymore (S Folan 83), M Coyle, Barry McNamee, A Foley (T Owolabi 55).

REF: Paul McLaughlin

Rovers Ratings

Ed McGinty: 6 – Wasn’t busy in a shot-stopping sense, but his ability to claim crosses is remarkable.

Colm Horgan: 7 – Very good today. Kept the width really well when Gibson went infield.

Garry Buckley: 6 – Another solid performance.

John Mahon: 6 – This centre-back partnership could achieve great things here.

Robbie McCourt: 7 – Great on both ends of the pitch today. Won us the game with his block on Boyd late on.

Greg Bolger: 6 – Was poor in the first half but completely turned it around in the second.

Niall Morahan: 6 – Was effective in the middle of the park.

Walter Figueira: 8 – Was an absolute menace today, had the Harps defence on strings.

Jordan Gibson: 7 – Played very well alongside Figueria out wide. The two combined stretched Harps.

Ryan De Vries: 6 – I can’t be too harsh since I know he reads this but he was clamped by the Shams defence. Taken off at half-time.

Romeo Parkes: 6 – Didn’t do anything outstanding apart from his chance in the first half.

Johnny Kenny: 7 – Finally scored!! A great performance off the bench.

David Cawley: 7 – An efficient cameo.

Photo Credit: James Fallon

BORST After Match Reception

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Stalemate in Shams showdown

Rovers 1-1 Shams

Sligo Rovers drew 1-1 to Shamrock Rovers in the Showgrounds on Saturday evening in a match where defensive blunders proved costly to both sides. Walter Figueira got off the mark for official Rovers goals when his speculative effort creeped under Alan Mannus and into the net in the 82nd minute, but his blushes were spared when Rory Gaffney equalised after a mix-up in the Sligo Rovers defence, which had remained impenetrable until that moment. The result means we lay 3rd in the league table, with 8 points from 4 games.


The Bit O’Red and Liam Buckley returned to a side we have gotten to know quite well over the first two games of the season, with one change from the clash in Longford. Walter Figueira must have done enough with his brace in a friendly match against Finn Harps on Monday to warrant a start over David Cawley, with Danny Kane being unfortunately ruled out of the derby due to a knock. Shamrock Rovers also only made a single change to their previous lineup which triumphed over Dundalk, with Dylan Watts taking the place of Sean Gannon in the side. Roberto Lopes also reinstated himself to the Shams team sheet after international duty quarantine.
The beginning of the match was a frenzied affair with Shams displaying the qualities which made them unbeaten champions in the truncated previous season. The visitor’s intensity nearly proved too much for the Bit O’Red, but the real Rovers were able to weather the storm and reply with chances of their own when Greg Bolger forced Alan Mannus into a good save after a corner routine executed to perfection. Robbie McCourt also threatened with a free kick which arrowed just over the bar on the cusp of half time.


Ryan De Vries came on for Johnny Kenny to kick off the second half, which started in much of the same vein as the opening stages of the first half with Shams applying pressure to our defence. The match stayed somewhat stagnant (well, as stagnant as a Rovers derby can be) until the 78th minute, when Shams manager Stephen Bradley rolled the dice and brought on Rory Gaffney and Sean Gannon for Graham Burke and Ronan Finn. Rovers made use of the change in tactics after this change to isolate Walter Figueira, whose half-chance found its way into the Churchill Road end net after Alan Mannus botched his dive for the ball trickling into his near post. Rovers then attempted to dig deep but were undone by a deep cross into the feet of the aforementioned substitute Rory Gaffney, who managed to equalise with the help of a deflection. This deflated the Bit O’Red who ultimately settled for the tie.


A frustrating way to draw but at the same time, a good point against the champions. See you next Sunday when we play Bohs at home.


Teams

SLIGO ROVERS: E McGinty, C Horgan, J Mahon, G Buckley, R McCourt, J Gibson (W Figueira 83), G Bolger, N Morahan, W Figueira, R Parkes, J Kenny (R De Vries 45).

SHAMROCK ROVERS: A Mannus, S Hoare, L Grace, L Scales, R Finn (S Gannon 78), D Watts, C McCann, S Kavanagh, G Burke (R Gaffney 78), A Greene, D Mandriou.
REF: Derek Tomney


Rovers Ratings

Ed McGinty: 6 – Was solid in claiming crosses.
Colm Horgan: 6 – Worked the right flank well but wasn’t always spotted.
Garry Buckley: 7 – Imperious at the back today.
John Mahon: 6 – Did well up until the equalizer.
Robbie McCourt: 6 – Decent in open play but his set-pieces…. if I say what I’m thinking I won’t be writing any more articles on here.
Greg Bolger: 6 – Séamus Coleman drilled the importance of the game to him via Zoom and it showed on the pitch with his effort.
Niall Morahan: 6 – He was tenacious today alongside Bolger.
Walter Figueira: 7 – His best game for the club so far. Got lucky with the goal but he deserved it due to his workrate.
Jordan Gibson: 6 – Not everything he tried today worked but showed his desire with a last-gasp block at 1-0.
Johnny Kenny: 6 – I can’t be too harsh since I know he reads this but he was clamped by the Shams defence. Taken off at half-time.
Romeo Parkes: 6 – Not a classic Romeo-oh-oh performance by any means.
Ryan De Vries: 6 – Influenced the game well, came deeper to get the ball and it generally worked in our favour.

BORST AFTER MATCH REACTION

Recorded live after the game, rewatch the Borst crew review the result.