Daryl Murphy’s perfect moment saves Ireland
Daryl Murphy’s perfect moment saves Ireland
Serbia 2 Republic of Ireland 2Daryl Murphy chose the perfect moment to end his wait for a first Republic of Ireland goal when he came off the bench to snatch a 2-2 World Cup qualifier draw in Serbia.
Murphy's 80th-minute contribution to an eventful contest at the Rajko Mitic Stadium handed Ireland a positive start to their Group D campaign on a night when they never hit the heights they scaled at their best in France this summer.
But as they always do, they kept going until the death and once again, emerged with something to show for their efforts.
advertisement
Jeff
Hendrick had got them off to a dream start with a third-minute opener,
but when the hugely impressive Filip Kostic and Dusan struck within five
minutes of each other, the writing looked to be on the wall for Martin
O'Neill's men.But Murphy grasped a positive conclusion to a potentially damaging evening to send his side into their home clash with Georgia and Moldova away next month with something to build upon, if with questions to be answered.
O'Neill gambled on the fitness of skipper Seamus Coleman who has not yet kicked a ball in anger for club Everton this season because of an ankle injury, and drafted in experience in the shape of John O'Shea, Glenn Whelan and Jonathan Walters with Shane Duffy suspended, James McCarthy unfit and Murphy named among the substitutes.
Robbie Brady, wearing the number 10 shirt vacated by retired talisman Robbie Keane, curled a free-kick into the penalty area which 20-year-old keeper Predrag Rajkovic, making his competitive debut, could only palm towards O'Shea.
On a pitch left slick by incessant rain which had started during the afternoon and continued at kick-off, the Serbs responded immediately and with Tadic and Kostic menacing in wide positions either side of striker Aleksandar Mitrovic, Ireland found themselves under pressure for extended periods.
Ireland were having to defend deep and in numbers, but it was they who created the better chances, mainly from set-pieces, and they would have extended their lead eight minutes before the break when Jonathan Walters glanced another Brady free-kick towards goal, but saw Rajkovic parry his effort.
Serbia might have been back in it on the stroke of half-time when wing-back Antonio Rukavina ran on to Tadic's clever reverse pass and sent in a low cross which Randolph could only jab towards Mitrovic six yards out, but the Newcastle man could not control the ball on an increasingly uneven pitch and he and his team-mates headed for the dressing room to a chorus of boos.
But his side was level within 17 minutes of the restart when Tadic finally created the opening Serbia craved five minutes later and the unmarked Kostic tapped gleefully past the helpless Randolph.
The game should have been all over with 18 minutes remaining, but substitute Andrija Pavlovic contrived to hit the bar from point-blank distance after Randolph had saved Filip Mladenovic's effort, and the visitors thought they were level within seconds when Walters headed Hendrick's cross past Rajkovic, only for an offside flag to ruin his celebrations.
James McClean past up a golden opportunity when he missed the target with a free header, but substitute Murphy was not so wasteful when he powered home from Brady's corner to snatch a point.
Comments
Post a Comment