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2011 Nations Cup
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| tourney_name | Nations Cup |
| year | 2011 |
| image | Nations Cup (football) logo.png |
| country | Republic of Ireland |
| dates | 8 February – 29 May 2011 |
| num_teams | 4 |
| venues | Aviva Stadium |
| city | Dublin |
| champion | IRL |
| second | SCO |
| third | WAL |
| fourth | NIR |
| matches | 6 |
| goals | 18 |
| top_scorer | IRL Robbie Keane (3) |
| attendance | 74867 |
The 2011 Nations Cup (also known as the Carling Nations Cup after its headline sponsor) was a round-robin football tournament between the Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales national teams. The first set of two games were played in Dublin in February, with the remaining four games played in May 2011. It was won by the Republic of Ireland, who won all three of their games without conceding a goal.
History
The first international association football match was played between England and Scotland, two of the Home Nations of the United Kingdom, in 1872. The remaining two Home Nations, Wales and Ireland both played their first matches within the following decade, in 1876 and 1882 respectively. The first meetings between the sides were friendlies until they were organised to form the British Home Championship, the first international football tournament, for the 1883–84 season. The competition continued for 100 years, although it was not held during the First or Second World War, before being abolished in 1984 due to claims of fading interest and low crowds.
Calls for the return of the a competition between the Home Nations had been sporadically raised since the end of the British Home Championship with varying degrees of success, but the idea gained widespread attention in 2006 when Northern Ireland manager Lawrie Sanchez called for its return. In 2007, the national football associations of Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland met with Wales raising a proposal to revive a Home Nations tournament in the form of a "Celtic Cup" in response to the failure of any British side to qualify for UEFA Euro 2008. However, the plan was ultimately delayed due to fixture congestion with 2010 FIFA World Cup qualifying fixtures already being in place. The competition was officially announced in September the following year with the tournament scheduled to be held in Dublin between February and May 2011. England chose to turn down the chance to take part in the competition citing fixture congestion. The Football Association of Wales stated its belief in 2007 that England might have joined at a later date if they could have been convinced that there were "practical solutions" to problems like fixture congestion.
It was announced on 12 August 2010, that the tournament would be sponsored by brewing company Carling, and known for sponsorship reasons as the Carling Nations Cup. A second tournament was provisionally scheduled to take place in Wales in 2013.
The 2011 Nations Cup began in February 2011 at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin. The Republic of Ireland won the inaugural tournament after winning all three of their matches, culminating with a 1–0 win over Scotland on the final matchday. It was originally intended to be a biennial tournament, but poor attendance at the first tournament meant that it was discontinued.
Format
The Nations Cup plan initially proposed the tournament would be played as a knockout competition, with the semi-finals being played in August and the final and third-place playoff being played the following February. However, the competition was eventually structured as a round-robin, with each team playing each of the others once, resulting in a total of six games in each season of the competition. Three of the teams involved (Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland) had formerly competed in the now defunct British Home Championship, along with England. The matches in the 2011 tournament were played in February and May, with the location due to rotate on a tournament-by-tournament basis. Brittany also expressed an interest in taking part.
Venue
The newly rebuilt Aviva Stadium was chosen to host all six games of the 2011 tournament.
| Dublin | |
|---|---|
| Aviva Stadium | |
| Capacity: **51,700** | |
| [[File:Aviva Stadium(Dublin Arena).JPG | 300px]] |
Referees
- IRL Tomás Connolly
- Northern Ireland Mark Courtney
- Northern Ireland Raymond Crangle
- IRL Alan Kelly
- SCO Craig Thomson
- WAL Mark Whitby
Summary
Matchday one
Republic of Ireland v Wales
The opening match of the competition was played on 8 February 2011 in front of more than 19,000 spectators and featured tournament hosts the Republic of Ireland and Wales. The match was Gary Speed's first fixture in charge of Wales since his appointment as manager in December 2010. Ireland nearly took an early lead when Damien Duff struck the post within the opening five minutes of the game. Wales were denied a penalty by referee Mark Courtney when Hal Robson-Kanu went down in the Ireland penalty box under pressure from Séamus Coleman in a first half that was described by The Guardian as "tame and error-strewn". Ireland registered a number of chances early in the second half before Darron Gibson scored the tournament's opening goal when he played a one-two with Glen Whelan before scoring from 25 yards. Duff added a second seven minutes later with his first international goal for five years before Keith Fahey scored his side's third goal in the final ten minutes with a 20-yard free-kick.
Duff Fahey
| ITA Giovanni Trapattoni |
|---|
| WAL Gary Speed |
|---|
|}
Northern Ireland v Scotland
Northern Ireland and Scotland met a day after the opening match, attracting a crowd of more than 18,000. Scotland midfielder Scott Brown suffered an injury in the warm-up leading to his withdrawal from the starting line-up. When the match began, Northern Ireland enjoyed the brighter start as Niall McGinn saw a shot saved by opposition goalkeeper Allan McGregor However, Scotland soon took control of the match and Kenny Miller, captaining Scotland for the first time in his career, gave his side the lead after 19 minutes after a corner fell to him a yard from the goalline. The goal was the first Scotland had scored in an away fixture since December 2009. Scotland applied further pressure; Steven Caldwell hit the crossbar with a header and Kris Commons' shot was cleared off the goalline before James McArthur, Brown's late replacement in the side, added a second goal after 31 minutes. In the opening minutes of the second half, Scotland scored a third goal via Commons. The match ended in a 3–0 victory for Scotland, matching Ireland's opening result and recording the biggest away victory for the Scots in more than five years.
McArthur Commons
| NIR Nigel Worthington |
|---|
| SCO Craig Levein |
|---|
|}
Matchday two
Republic of Ireland v Northern Ireland
The second round of fixtures began with a fixture between the Republic of Ireland and neighbouring Northern Ireland on 24 May. A row between the two nations over player eligibility, brought on by two Northern Irish youth internationals changing allegiances in the lead up to the fixture, lead to a boycott of the match by fans of the side with only around 200 travelling to the game. Although Northern Ireland started well, the Republic took the lead shortly before half-time through debutant Stephen Ward after an error by opposition goalkeeper Alan Blayney. Republic striker Robbie Keane capitalised on another defensive error shortly afterwards, intercepting a pass by Lee Hodson before converting. The Republic added a third before half time when Northern Ireland defender Craig Cathcart turned a cross into his own net.
Early in the second half, a poor clearance by Blayney led to Adam Thompson conceding a penalty following a foul on Keane. Thompson received the only red card of the Nations Cup for his foul, despite Keane calling for leniency from referee Craig Thomson. Keane converted the resulting penalty for his second goal of the game. Another debutant, Simon Cox, scored a fifth for the Republic with ten minutes remaining. The five goal deficit was the largest margin of victory ever recorded by the Republic over Northern Ireland and was the Republic's largest victory since a win over San Marino by the same scoreline in 2006.
Keane Cathcart Cox
| ITA Giovanni Trapattoni |
|---|
| NIR Nigel Worthington |
|---|
|}
Wales v Scotland
Miller Berra
| WAL Gary Speed |
|---|
| SCO Craig Levein |
|---|
|}
Matchday three
Wales v Northern Ireland
Earnshaw
| WAL Gary Speed |
|---|
| NIR Nigel Worthington |
|---|
|}
Republic of Ireland v Scotland
| ITA Giovanni Trapattoni |
|---|
| SCO Craig Levein |
|---|
|}
Standings
Goalscorers
;3 goals
- IRL Robbie Keane
;2 goals
- SCO Kenny Miller
- WAL Robert Earnshaw
;1 goal
- SCO Christophe Berra
- SCO Kris Commons
- IRL Simon Cox
- IRL Damien Duff
- IRL Keith Fahey
- IRL Darron Gibson
- SCO James McArthur
- SCO James Morrison
- WAL Aaron Ramsey
- IRL Stephen Ward
;1 goal (own goal)
- NIR Craig Cathcart (for )
Media coverage
Every match of the tournament was shown live on Sky Sports (also on Sky 3D), with the Wales matches simulcasted live with Welsh language commentary on S4C.
- United Kingdom and Ireland: Sky Sports
- Ireland: RTÉ (Highlights of all matches)
- Northern Ireland: BBC Northern Ireland (Highlights of Northern Irish matches only)
- Wales: S4C (Welsh matches only)
Aftermath
Criticism
The Football Association of Ireland was criticised by the media, supporters and other football associations for setting high ticket prices. The 51,700-capacity Aviva Stadium was less than half-full for all of the games. The game between Wales and Northern Ireland was attended by only 529 fans, many of whom were Scots who happened to be in Dublin for their country's game two days later.
During the game between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, Republic fans booed "God Save the Queen", and Northern Ireland fans booed the President of Ireland, Mary McAleese, as she greeted players before the game. Northern Ireland fans were criticised for singing sectarian chants at games. Scotland fans also booed "God Save the Queen", when playing Northern Ireland.
Wales manager Gary Speed criticised the tournament organisers for scheduling Wales' games to be within three days of each other, the only team to suffer such timing. He also criticised the officiating in the game against Scotland, in which in his opinion several fouls on Welsh players went unpunished.
Future tournaments
After the first tournament, which attracted some small attendances, there was a dispute about the division of revenues between the four associations. In early 2011, it was reported by BBC Sport that there was a possibility of the British Home Championship being revived in 2013, but no tournament was held. Jim Shaw, the president of the Irish Football Association, said in January 2012 that he did not envisage a second tournament being staged.
References
References
- Forbes, Craig. (13 August 2010). "England no great loss to Nations Cup, says Burley". Johnston Press Digital Publishing.
- (25 March 2009). "Dates Announced For 4 Associations' Tournament In Dublin 2011". Football Association of Wales.
- (18 September 2008). "4 Associations Tournament Announced for Dublin 2011". Football Association of Ireland.
- Mitchell, Paul. "The first international football match". BBC Sport.
- Martin, James. (24 September 2019). "The United Irish Football Team: A History Of Unique Progress And Dreams Of Resurrection". These Football Times.
- "British Home Championship". National Football Museum.
- Phillip, Robert. (30 November 2007). "Why the Home Internationals stopped". The Telegraph.
- Taylor, Graham. (26 March 2005). "The Home Championship should remain a relic". The Telegraph.
- (12 December 2006). "Sanchez wants Celtic tournament". BBC Sport.
- (23 June 2007). "Scots backing Celtic Cup". Media Wales.
- (11 April 2008). "'Four Nations' plan faces delay". BBC Sport.
- (18 September 2008). "Celtic nations to play 2011 event". BBC Sport.
- (22 June 2007). "Home internationals resurrection edges a step closer". The Guardian.
- (12 August 2010). "Carling to sponsor new Four Nations Football Tournament". [[Football Association of Ireland]].
- (8 January 2012). "Northern Ireland set to pull out of Nations Cup". BBC.
- (18 September 2008). "Celtic nations to play 2011 event". BBC Sport.
- (10 February 2011). "Nations Cup revives memories of banter, blood and thunder". BBC News.
- (11 April 2008). "Celtic Cup given go-ahead". [[FIFA.
- "Scotland could compete in new Celtic Nations Cup in Brittany.".
- Murray, Ewan. (8 February 2011). "Gary Speed sees his Wales debut ruined by rampant Republic of Ireland". The Guardian.
- (8 February 2011). "Nations Cup: Republic of Ireland 3–0 Wales". BBC Sport.
- Murray, Ewan. (9 February 2011). "Scotland sweep aside Northern Ireland in Nations Cup".
- (9 February 2011). "Scotland 3–0 Northern Ireland". BBC Sport.
- (17 May 2011). "NI poised to lose Devine and Ferguson to Republic". BBC Sport.
- Murray, Ewan. (24 May 2011). "James McCarthy awol as Northern Ireland are thrashed by Republic". The Guardian.
- "Ireland – International Results". The Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation.
- (17 December 2001). "Carling Nations Cup announces broadcast partnership with Sky Sports 3D". Football Association of Ireland.
- (11 May 2011). "Norn Iron fans set to stage Aviva boycott". JOE.ie.
- (24 May 2011). "Ghost town expected at the Aviva Stadium". JOE.ie.
- (24 May 2011). "Bragging rights for Republic". Examiner.
- (24 May 2011). "As it happened: Republic of Ireland v Northern Ireland". TheScore.ie.
- (15 February 2011). "Anger at Sectarian songs after NI game". UTV.
- Murray, Euan. (9 February 2011). "Scotland sweep aside Northern Ireland in Nations Cup". Guardian News and Media.
- (26 May 2011). "Wales manager Gary Speed condemns Charlie Adam's challenge". Guardian News and Media.
- (25 May 2011). "Wales are Carling Cup 'poor relations' says Gary Speed". BBC.
- Slater, Matt. (10 January 2011). "Vauxhall tie-ins herald return for British Championship". BBC Sport.
- (11 January 2011). "FA says home internationals will be 'one-off'". BBC Sport.
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