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Men's Football Coleman: It’s no longer a Given that the Keanes of old will save us

Seamus Coleman called on his international teammates to stand up and be counted following Monday night’s 0-0 draw against Denmark.

The Republic of Ireland have endured a tough 2018, winning one game out of a possible nine, and calls have increased for manager Martin O’Neill to step down and let someone else with fresh ideas take the team forward.

Losing Shay Given, Richard Dunne, John O’Shea, Damien Duff and Robbie Keane to retirement has been difficult to overcome given what the group of players achieved — qualifying for Euro 2012 and 2016 mixed in with narrowly missing out on World Cup 2010 and 2018.

And the Everton defender believes that the current squad assembled now has to take the baton forward as they can no longer rely on players of the past.

He said: “There’s no secret about it, there’s no way of dressing it up, it’s been a disappointing year, no doubt about that. It’s been a learning curve for myself and some of the other lads who have 40 or 50 caps too.

“We don’t have Richard Dunnes, Robbie Keanes and Damien Duffs to carry us through any more. We have to take that baton now and maybe some of us haven’t done that strongly enough.

“The new lads coming in will have learned a lot from this year. That, in a way, is some kind of positive to take from a negative year. Mentally we can be a lot stronger going into the games in March. That’s how we have to look at it.”

Ireland’s difficulties have been brought into sharper focus by their inability to find the back of the net with the stalemate in Aarhus extending their barren run to 397 minutes of football without a goal since Aiden O’Brien scored in Poland in September.

O’Neill rightly points to the overhaul of personnel and the difficulty of the fixture list with which his players have been presented in mitigation, but a perceived lack of ambition — the Republic did not manage a single effort on target against the Danes — has attracted criticism to the extent that his side was booed from the field after a 0-0 friendly draw with Northern Ireland last Thursday evening.

Coleman said: “It’s hard to enjoy it all the time when you’re under pressure, but you’ve got to remember what you wanted to play football for, which was to represent your country.

“You’ve got to take the good with the bad. It’s been a tough year, we can learn a lot from it and I think we can improve.”

They will have to improve significantly if they are to stand any chance of prospering when the Euro 2020 qualifiers get under way in March next year with a defiant O’Neill adamant he has what it takes to guide them to the finals.

Coleman, who was part of the side which made it to the last 16 in France two summers ago, is confident too that there will be better times to come.

He said: “We’re capable of big nights and we can’t forget that. We need to step up a little bit more. Come March, I have no doubt that we’ll be ready. I know we have to say that, but I truly believe we’ll be ready.”

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