Last
night, ten years of waiting for the Republic of Ireland to grace an
international tournament came to an end as they faced Croatia in their opening
game of Euro 2012. A twenty-three year gap between European Championship
appearances was bridged. I wasn’t born the last time Ireland played in the
Euros – though, I was quite possibly conceived during the tournament in ’88 as
I slipped gracefully into the world in the March of ’89. As one of the lads
said in the pub: “You would’ve just been one rubbed out had Ireland not been it.”
It’s hard to disagree with the logic.
Ever
since the sack holding the cat was firmly closed in November, I’ve been willing
the time to pass. I can still remember the 2002 World Cup and the excitement
which surrounded it (I was only 13 and Robbie Keane’s late goal against Germany
remains a treasured memory). And as the Euros have approached, the buzz
generated has become equally infectious, spreading even to people who have no
interest in the game. Buntings and flags fly from most houses. Yesterday
everyone was dressed to support Ireland (I was wearing a flag like a cape in
work). Spirits were high; optimism was higher.
Nobody
seemed to doubt we would get something against Croatia, despite the memory of
our last meeting in August 2011 when the 0-0 scoreline flattered us. I felt we
needed at least a point from yesterday’s game to have a chance of progression.
I had already reconciled myself to defeat against Spain in our second game once
we achieved the right results in our first and last games, the latter being
against an Italy side whose preparations were thrown into disarray by another
match-fixing scandal. And so, I was calm. Like everybody else, I believed we
would get a result against Croatia.
Come
three o’clock I was running out of work; by four, I had reached the Promised
Land – The Donaghmede Inn. I was fully expecting to be cramped in a corner of
‘the Binn’ – as it is affectionately known – by the time I got there, but the
lads had shown extreme levels of dedication to the cause in my absence: they
were outside the pub before it had even opened in order to get the coveted
table right in front of the big screen. At five, we witnessed Spain and Italy
play out an entertaining 1-1 draw, a result that suited us perfectly. The
countdown was on and the Binn was jumping.
A DJ
hooked himself in and played a rake of anthems, old and new, from Put ‘Em Under Pressure to The Rocky Road to Poland. Everybody was
kitted out in green and white, chanting along to the songs. The atmosphere was
electric and it soon became quite difficult to move. One girl in particular
apologised to me repeatedly every time she had to brush past me. “You have two
tit-shaped holes in your back now!” one lad behind me eventually roared as he
shook my shoulders. I have no idea if her tits were that busty. I hadn’t time
to check.
I was
getting anxious. I just wanted the talking to stop and the football to start.
Chants of “You’ll never beat the Irish!” continued until kick-off. They went on
for a minute or two after as well – but they were silenced in the third minute when
Mario Mandžukić scored what must be the most bizarre goal of his career. He
even slipped before regaining his feet to stoop and loop a half-hunched header
past an unsighted Shay Given from at least twelve yards. The silence was momentary
but deafening. “What the f**k?” somebody eventually asked.
Now
wasn’t the time to panic. “Come on Ireland, only three minutes gone, loadsa
time!” We fought our way back up the
pitch but Vedran Corluka was doing his best to impede our advance with his
persistent fouling. He’d do well not to turn up in Donaghmede anytime soon.
That said, a foul he committed on the right-wing led to our equaliser. The ball
was whipped in and Sean St. Ledger, aka Sledge, rose highest to beat Corluka
and head home. The Binn exploded.
I just
sat there. I’d heard a whistle blow as the ball was whipped in. I was convinced
there was a foul or something. I didn’t want to suffer crushing disappointment,
so I didn’t accept the goal and just waited for the indignant shouts to begin
as the ref pulled it back. But he never did. Everybody was still celebrating
and I was missing out over some random whistle I thought I’d heard. “F**KING
YEEEEEESSS!” I yelled as I belatedly jumped up, confused and delirious.
“But
dare I dream again?” I wondered. I had already been hurt once. And Ireland did
their best to make sure I suffered palpitations by being so unbelievably casual
in possession at times – if it wasn’t Richard Dunne allowing Nikica Jelavic to
rob him of the ball in his own half it was Keano doing stepovers outside his
own box. I just wanted to get to half-time at 1-1, and it looked like that
would be the case. Until…
Jelavic,
the git. He annoyed me at Rangers with his exploits, and now here he was,
doubly-offside at a glance, the happy beneficiary of rules regarding player
activity during passages of play and – more frustratingly – the banana right
foot of Stephan Ward. His finish was tidy but I only admit that in hindsight.
And it looks like there was a foul on Ward which caused his sliced clearance.
Five officials and not one spotted this?
The
interval in the Binn passed by in heated debate. Offside or not? Substitutions
or not? The only unanimous conclusion to be reached regarded the merits of Ward’s
place in the team. The words weren’t kind. Even more unkind was the goal we
conceded three minutes after the restart – Shay Given with a wonderful diving
header after Mandzukic had headed onto the post.
Given’s
head hit the turf. Mine hit the table. I didn’t rise for three minutes. We were
then denied a penalty with fifteen minutes to go when Keano was bundled over
from behind. We weren’t playing well, we weren’t getting any favours from the
ref – if ever the phrase “It’s just not your night” was more apt, I’d like to
know when.
By now
the frustrations of those in the Binn was at its peak. Belated changes were
made, which pleased the patrons, but they reaped no reward. Keith Andrews had a
couple of decent chances, particularly a header that he should have scored. In
the end, we lost 3-1. Ten years of waiting ruined in ten minutes. That said, we
could still do the unthinkable and beat either Spain or Italy, or even both.
This was published during my brief spell as a writer-in-residence with Teaandtoast.ie, a now seemingly defunct political and culture website (the Facebook page remains but is largely inactive). A good friend of mine who had become editor of the site in May asked me to contribute to the cultural aspect of the website she was developing, so I wrote slightly comedic feature/opinion pieces on various societal ills which occurred in Dublin between May and July of 2012.
To me, Ireland's opening Euro 2012 performance was a societal ill but the atmosphere of my local pub was a saving grace. In the end, Ireland's elimination was as ruthless as their performances were insipid but I take solace from the fact that both tournament finalists came out of our group in the end - it only took me roughly eight months to accept this as being okay.
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