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Old June 12th, 2017, 00:02
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Default Rep of Ireland 1-1 Austria

Rep of Ireland 1-1 Austria: Walters strike forces stalemate (June 11 2017)

Jonathan Walters pounced late in the second half with a valuable equaliser as the Republic of Ireland drew 1-1 with Austria.


Jonathan Walters got the Republic of Ireland out of jail as Austria threatened to dent their World Cup qualification hopes.

Walters' 85th-minute equaliser to earn a 1-1 draw ensures the Republic will head into September's Group D double-header against Georgia and Serbia still four points clear of the Austrians, who left Dublin wondering just how they had taken only a point.

They might even have boarded the plane empty-handed had Shane Duffy's late header not been ruled out for a foul, but that would simply have been daylight robbery of a side who had deservedly led through Martin Hinteregger's strike.

The Austrians had been exercised by Ireland assistant manager Roy Keane's exhortation to his players to "go to war" at the Aviva Stadium, but the home side's initial efforts barely amounted to a skirmish until they eventually threw caution to the wind.

Even Robbie Brady and Jeff Hendrick, the stars of the nation's Euro 2016 finals campaign, were largely becalmed as a chance to take a huge stride towards Russia very nearly went begging, and they will have to be much better in their remaining four games if they are to make it to Russia.

Manager Martin O'Neill sprang a surprise when he handed a third cap and a competitive debut to Burnley defender Kevin Long, who could hardly have dreamt that would be his reward for missing out on being best man at his brother's wedding last weekend to join up with the squad.

But the champagne he missed out on on that occasion remained on ice as Ireland turned in as poor an opening 45 minutes as they have done for some time, as their distaste for being regarded as favourites proved well-founded.

An Austria side shorn of many of their big names by injury, illness and suspension took the game by the scruff of the neck, just as O'Neill had urged his own players to do in the run-up.

Having employed Walters as a lone striker and asked James McClean, Hendrick and Brady to support him, the manager was forced into a re-think with just 36 minutes played after seeing his team labour to create anything of note and resort instead to launching hopeful long balls in Walters' direction.

By that point, they were already trailing with full-back Hinteregger having blasted the visitors into a 31st-minute lead after defender Sebastian Prodl dummied David Alaba's out-swinging corner.

It was no more than they deserved from a half during which Alaba and Hinteregger down one wing and Valentino Lazaro and Stefan Lainer down the other had got forward at will to put Ireland under pressure.

Both full-back Cyrus Christie and Brady, who endured one of his least effective halves of football for his country, were booked as they attempted to stem the tide, and there was a far from warm welcome awaiting in the dressing room at the break.

Ireland needed an early response and resumed in encouraging fashion when defender Duffy headed just wide, although they might have fallen further behind when Alaba skied a shot after exchanging passes with Florian Kainz, and Zlatko Junuzovic was denied by Duffy's last-ditch block.

Harry Arter dragged a 55th-minute shot wide when he might have done better, and that prompted O'Neill to make his move, sending on striker Daryl Murphy for left-back Stephen Ward and asking Brady to drop into the back four.

But the drama only arrived in the closing stages with the Republic going for broke.

Long saw his 80th-minute header hacked off the line by Lainer, but the home side were not to be denied and they levelled five minutes later when Walters smashed a dipping volley across goalkeeper Heinz Lindner and into the bottom corner.

Ireland though they had won it seconds later when Duffy bundled the ball home from close range after substitute Florian Grillitsch desperately hacked the ball towards his own goal, but Spanish referee David Borbalan had spotted a foul on Lainer on the line and chalked it off.
Match reaction


Irish manager Martin O'Neill on the match officials: "I'm delighted to have got the equaliser and I thought that we had a legitimate, good goal disallowed. The referee wasn't totally to blame for our performance in the first half, but I thought he was very poor in the game.

"Considering he was letting things go during the course of the game - that's fine, I like referees who let things go - but he seemed to be penalising us a great deal.

"I'll tell you something now: there might have been a player called Andy Gray who wouldn't have scored a goal. They'd have to take almost 400 goals off him.

"When he (the referee) first pointed, I thought he'd obviously given it. The linesman is halfway up the pitch - he's closer to me than he is to the game. Once or twice, I was close to him as well.

"Listen, I can't change it. I thought it was a good goal and funnily enough, Jon Walters, it is a penalty, he's caught his foot."

Midfielder James McClean on the referee: "I know in this day and age, you get fined (for criticising referees), but you watched the game, you tell me.

"They (Austria) had a 12th man today. That's all I'll say on that. I'm really disappointed because we should have come away from that game with three points, but we didn't."

O'Neill on the performance: "We had a very, very tough first half, I thought Austria were better than us. We had a very poor opening 15 minutes, put no real pressure on Austria and allowed them to get into the game, almost taking the crowd out of the scenario.

"We couldn't really create anything in the game, and I was a bit surprised about that because we had talked a couple of days ago about trying to get started very, very early in the game and trying to be on the front foot."

Austria coach Marcel Koller on getting a draw: "Ireland were playing at home and we think they are happy with the draw because it keeps us at a distance. We weren't under so much pressure in the first half, but we knew the pressure would come.

"It was a very intense game and we played especially well in the first half and managed to score.

"In the second half, Ireland put us under pressure and we lost the ball too easily, but we still had chances to score the second goal. But we were also lucky not to concede a goal.

"There are still 12 points to earn in qualification and we will try to get as many as possible."
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