Back to news
Have expectations been set too high for Ireland after mixed Nations League group?
@Source: the42.ie
Advertisement
League of Ireland
Horse Racing
TV Listings
GAA Fixtures
The Video Review
Sport meets news, current affairs, society & pop culture
Rugby Weekly Extra
Dive into all the news and analysis 3 times a week
The Football Family
Weekly insights from the week’s big talking points
Advertisement
More Stories
The Ireland XI that played Slovenia in Cork last week.Ben Brady/INPHO
AnalysisCampaign Review
Have expectations been set too high for Ireland after mixed Nations League group?
Reviewing Ireland’s campaign to date, and looking to what’s next.
8.01pm, 9 Jun 2025
Share options
IT STARTED AND finished with 1-0 wins at home, but Ireland bookended their Uefa Women’s Nations League group campaign quite differently.
The opener was a scrappy, unconvincing victory over Türkiye at Tallaght Stadium in February, marking Carla Ward’s first game in charge in a period of much change.
The closer brought the best performance of her tenure, a dominant triumph against Slovenia at Páirc Uí Chaoimh, albeit just by the minimum — and revenge, of sorts, for the 4-0 humbling in Koper in game two.
It wasn’t enough to usurp the Slovenians atop Group B2 and secure automatic promotion: Ireland will go head-to-head with Belgium for League A status in the playoffs in October.
The expectation at the outset was Ireland would easily win the group, like they did under Eileen Gleeson in 2023.
“But we didn’t have Slovenia,” Ward warned in February. “The teams are closer, but naturally we want to win all six and I’m sure I’ll have a lovely summer.”
She had to settle for five, and much to ponder ahead of two international friendlies against USA later this month, and the campaign-defining playoff against Belgium.
In the autumn of 2023, Gleeson’s side made light work of Northern Ireland, Hungary and Albania as they enjoyed a 100% record, scored 20 goals and conceded two.
Slovenia, Türkiye and Greece were better opposition this time around as standards rise across Europe, but this was a patchy series as Ireland scored 10 and conceded six.
Have expectations been set too high? Ward believes the team overachieved by reaching the World Cup in 2023, while they have certainly punched above their weight at times through the years.
The Koper horror show was a wake-up call for Irish women’s football as a whole, as we wrote at the time, with wider development coming into question. That will only continue as head of women and girls’ football Hannah Dingley exits after an underwhelming year in the job, but the team, at least, appear to have put that shocking result in the rear-view mirror.
Advertisement
Ireland head coach Carla Ward and assistant head coach Alan Mahon during that defeat to Slovenia.Ryan Byrne / INPHO
Ryan Byrne / INPHO / INPHO
The last few months have been a rollercoaster for the Irish women’s game.
Failure to qualify for Euro 2025 was a gut-punch last December, with the FAI opting for a change of management thereafter. The exit of Gleeson, and more so Colin Healy, dominated the headlines for weeks on end, the external noise undoubtedly taking a toll, with Ward appointed in the thick of it all.
That wasn’t the only major squad change: Ireland lost a combined total of 395 caps as Niamh Fahey, Diane Caldwell, Louise Quinn and Julie-Ann Russell all retired.
Much has been made of the transition, leadership void and Euros play-off hangover, along with changes of system and style. Ireland had been wedded to a back three/five and direct approach under Gleeson, Vera Pauw and Colin Bell, with Ward preferring possession-based, attacking football in a fluid 4-3-3.
Players have made no secret of their wishes to play a more expansive game, but the collective technical ability has been questioned in some quarters. Patience has been urged.
Defensive solidity has always been Ireland’s DNA, and this was often lost sight of in recent months. The quest to improve going forward seemed to come at the expense of strength at the back. They were torn apart too many times, not just in the first Slovenia implosion as player and positional experimentation backfired spectacularly.
A four-goal second-half salvo away to Greece was the other end of the scale, attacking encouragement evident against lowly opposition.
A balance was struck to good effect against Slovenia in Cork.
“Probably the way I’d put it would be a Carla Ward team on the ball and an Irish mentality off the ball,” the manager said afterwards.
“That’s what we need to build on. If we want to play in an exciting way going forward, and that’s the way I like my teams to play, we have to be better off the ball.
“The Irish have always been very good defensively. So let’s go back to the Irish basics. It’s tight, it’s compact, it’s together. And then add in how we want to play with the ball.
“If we can combine the two, the future is bright.”
In all, Ward used 21 players through the six games. The former Aston Villa boss appears to have not yet settled on her first-choice XI, while the first and last matches were the only in which she didn’t make half-time changes.
Courtney Brosnan, Anna Patten and Denise O’Sullivan played every minute, while Aoife Mannion and Lucy Quinn started five games before injury and illness hampered their involvement in the finale. Katie McCabe was also a mainstay, barring suspension and an injury concern in the Greece double-header.
The captain and Champions League winner is unavailable for the upcoming US friendlies — “she’s on the verge of burnout,” as Ward said — and several other players are unlikely to travel. That squad selection will be interesting, the door potentially open for younger and fringe players, and League of Ireland talent.
Ireland captain Katie McCabe.Ryan Byrne / INPHO
Ryan Byrne / INPHO / INPHO
Acid tests await against Emma Hayes’ world number one in Colorado (Thursday 26 June) and Cincinnati (Sunday 29 June), but development will be stressed in these games ahead of the all-important playoff in October.
Belgium are a consistent force in League A, and are preparing for this summer’s Euros, grouped with world champions Spain, Italy and Portugal. Ireland will be disappointed watching from afar, the sense of missed opportunity deepening, but they must focus on the next job.
Elísabet Gunnarsdótti’s side are 20th in the world rankings, six places above Ireland, while the highlight of their mixed Nations League group campaign was a 3-2 win over European champions England.
Belgium won 1-0 the last time they played Ireland in an international friendly in April 2021, and they’ll have home advantage in the second leg, but Ward and co. will hope to upset the odds, return to League A, and in turn, boost their 2027 World Cup qualification chances.
Maintaining a balance between Carla Ward football and the Irish way is the aim going forward. Compromise is key.
The jury is still out on this first campaign. Only after October’s playoff can definitive conclusions be drawn.
Viewcomments
Send Tip or Correction
Embed this post
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
Email “Have expectations been set too high for Ireland after mixed Nations League group?”.
Recipient's Email
Feedback on “Have expectations been set too high for Ireland after mixed Nations League group?”.
Your Feedback
Your Email (optional)
Report a Comment
Please select the reason for reporting this comment.
Please give full details of the problem with the comment...
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic.
Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy
before taking part.
Leave a Comment
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Damaging the good reputation of someone, slander, or libel.
Racism or Hate speech
An attack on an individual or group based on religion, race, gender, or beliefs.
Trolling or Off-topic
An attempt to derail the discussion.
Inappropriate language
Profanity, obscenity, vulgarity, or slurs.
Advertising, phishing, scamming, bots, or repetitive posts.
Please provide additional information
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.
Leave a commentcancel
Access to the comments facility has been disabled for this user
View our policy
⚠️ Duplicate comment
Post Comment
have your say
Or create a free account to join the discussion
Campaign Review
Nations League
FreeAthletics
Mark English breaks Irish record with 800m win in Netherlands
32 mins ago
FreeFriendly
George Hirst scores and Che Adams bags hat-trick as Scotland beat Liechtenstein
50 mins ago
Bealham's Lions delight as Farrell's men get up and running
Murray Kinsella
58 mins ago
FreeRayan Ait Nouri
Manchester City sign Wolves left-back for £31m
FreeFocused
Ireland boss urges players to be excited by progress but demands no drop off against Luxembourg
FreePlan Ahead
GAA confirm All-Ireland SHC and Tailteann Cup fixtures next weekend
FreePremier League
Spurs close in on Thomas Frank after making official approach to Brentford
'He just said in the dressing room, I've created a bit of a stir'
FreeDecider
Ticket sales heading towards 30,000 for URC final in Croker
Finlay Bealham called up to Lions squad as Fagerson ruled out
Draw made for Tailteann Cup quarter-finals
more from us
Investigates
Daft.ie Property Magazine
Allianz Home Magazine
The 42 Sports Magazine
Money Diaries
The Journal TV
Journal Media
Advertise With Us
About FactCheck
Our Network
FactCheck Knowledge Bank
Terms & Legal Notices
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
more from us
TV Listings
GAA Fixtures
The Video Review
Journal Media
Advertise With Us
Our Network
The Journal
FactCheck Knowledge Bank
Terms & Legal Notices
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
© 2025 Journal Media Ltd
Terms of Use
Cookies & Privacy
Advertising
Competition
Switch to Desktop
Switch to Mobile
The 42 supports the work of the Press Council of Ireland and the Office of the Press Ombudsman, and our staff operate within the Code of Practice. You can obtain a copy of the Code, or contact the Council, at https://www.presscouncil.ie, PH: (01) 6489130, Lo-Call 1800 208 080 or email: mailto:info@presscouncil.ie
Report an error, omission or problem:
Your Email (optional)
Create Email Alert
Create an email alert based on the current article
Email Address
One email every morning
As soon as new articles come online
Sign in or create
a free account
To continue reading create a free account
Or sign into an existing account
Related News
26 Apr, 2025
PHOTOS: Pope Francis’ image is everywher . . .
07 May, 2025
Harry’s so blinded by bitterness he’d ra . . .
15 Jul, 2025
Conor McGregor issues ultimatum to cast . . .
18 Jul, 2025
Stephen Appiah's son shows resilience in . . .
17 Jul, 2025
12-year-old Yu Zidi of China takes stunn . . .
12 Apr, 2025
18 спектакъла ще бъдат представени в меж . . .
10 Apr, 2025
Death In Paradise hidden meaning behind . . .
15 Jul, 2025
I've played board games like Frosthaven . . .