Guernsey Press

Seven games, no wins – What’s going on with Stephen Kenny’s Republic of Ireland?

Ireland have won only three of their last 20 competitive games.

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Stephen Kenny has endured a baptism of fire after stepping on to the international stage as the new Republic of Ireland manager.

Seven games into his reign, the former Derry City, Shamrock Rovers and Dundalk boss is yet to taste victory, and has seen his side miss out on Euro 2020 qualification and slip to within 90 minutes of relegation from Nations League B.

That, however, is only part of the story. Here, the PA news agency takes a look at a turbulent start to Kenny’s tenure.

Is the situation as bad as it looks?

If judged on the hard currency of results alone, the picture looks bleak. Kenny’s seven games to date have resulted in two draws and five defeats, one of them a heartbreaking exit from the Euro 2020 semi-finals in Slovakia on penalties. More worrying, perhaps, is Ireland’s lack of potency – they have scored only one goal under their new manager and none in the last six games. However, to put that run into some kind of context, the Republic have won just three of their last 20 competitive games and scored only 10 goals, three of them from the head of central defender Shane Duffy.

What is Kenny’s mission?

Nineteen-year-old striker Adam Idah (left) has been elevated to the senior Republic of Ireland team
Nineteen-year-old striker Adam Idah (left) has been elevated to the senior Republic of Ireland team (Carl Recine/PA)

What challenges does he face?

Many of Kenny’s challenges mirror those of his most recent predecessors. It is a long time since an Ireland manager could pick men playing regularly at big clubs with the likes of Shay Given, John O’Shea, Damien Duff and Robbie Keane all retired. Matt Doherty at Tottenham, Sheffield United duo Enda Stevens and John Egan and Newcastle midfielder Jeff Hendrick are playing Premier League football, but many of their team-mates are sitting on benches or plying their trade in the Sky Bet Championship. But perhaps the biggest conundrum remains finding someone – or in reality, several men – to fill Keane’s sizeable boots in front of goal, with youngsters Idah and Connolly yet to register, and a system which creates chances for them.

What can he plead in mitigation?

Is he under pressure?

Giovanni Trapattoni took the Republic of Ireland to the Euro 2012 finals
Giovanni Trapattoni took the Republic of Ireland to the Euro 2012 finals (Niall Carson/PA)
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