The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Opening Nations League loss to Bosnia ‘a sore one’, admits O’Neill

- By Ian Parker sport@sundaypost.com

NORTHERN IRELAND 1

Grigg (90)

BOSNIA-HERZEGOVIN­A 2

Duljevic (37), Saric (64)

Northern Ireland manager Michael O’Neill called yesterday’s defeat to Bosnia and Herzegovin­a “a sore one” after watching his side dominate the match. O’Neill’s side enjoyed 67% of the possession and had a total of 26 attempts at Bosnia’s goal – compared to five for the visitors – but dug themselves too big a hole by conceding two sloppy goals. “We’ve played a lot worse and won,” O’Neill said. “To have the level of domination we had in the game, the level of possession, it’s a sore one. “It’s a good lesson as well because I think it shows the nature of internatio­nal football, you do get punished.” Northern Ireland bossed the opening half hour, but Haris Duljevic poked the visitors in front after 37th minutes, and a positive start to the second half was undone by a mix-up between Craig Cathcart and Bailey Peacock-Farrell which allowed Elvis Saric to score. “The second goal and the nature of it was a little bit of a hammer blow,” O’Neill said. “But, to be fair, they reacted well again, even between going 2-0 down and getting to the 96th minute, we probably should have got a 2-2 out of the game at the very worst. “I’m disappoint­ed with the result, but in terms of how we played, the positivity of the team, how we pressed, it was exactly what we were was looking for.” Northern Ireland have struggled for goals of late and that lack of cutting edge was on display again as it took them until stoppage time to get on the scoresheet through Will Grigg, who was in the squad for the first time since November 2016. Things might have been very different if referee Pavel Kralovec had awarded a penalty in the opening minute when George Saville tumbled under a challenge from Ervin Zukanovic. O’Neill was certain it should have been a

spot-kick. “The defender leaves his leg there, George Saville steps inside and there is contact,” he said. “Away from home you maybe wouldn’t expect the referee to give that so early in the game but certainly as the home team and given the nature of the incident I was disappoint­ed he didn’t give it.” O’Neill had selected Peacock-Farrell ahead of the more experience­d Michael McGovern and Trevor Carson, giving the 21-year-old Leeds goalkeeper his first competitiv­e start, and did not feel he was to blame for the second goal. “It’s bad mistake, a poor goal for us to lose,” he said. “Typically we don’t lose goals of that nature and Craig knows the decision to head it where he headed it was not the right place. Young Bailey was exposed, he had to come and try and do something. We will not dwell on it.” It proved a decisive moment, though, leaving Northern Ireland chasing a game in which they were on top – a fact not lost on Bosnia’s star Miralem Pjanic. “We were a little bit lucky; they played a very good game,” the Juventus man said. “I think maybe they were also the better team, but we were more concrete, we scored two times, too.” Bosnia will now host Austria on Tuesday already in a strong position in the group, while Northern Ireland lick their wounds. But though the conversati­on around Northern Ireland this week has been about maintainin­g and building momentum, the manager refused to get too downbeat. “It’s not a major setback,” he said.

 ??  ?? Kyle Lafferty puts pressure on the visiting defence
Kyle Lafferty puts pressure on the visiting defence

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