2011 Nations Cup

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2011 Nations Cup

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2011 Nations Cup
Tournament details
Host country  Republic of Ireland
City Dublin
Dates 8 February – 29 May 2011
Teams 4
Venue(s) Aviva Stadium
Final positions
Champions  Republic of Ireland (1st title)
Runners-up  Scotland
Third place  Wales
Fourth place  Northern Ireland
Tournament statistics
Matches played 6
Goals scored 18 (3 per match)
Attendance 74,867 (12,478 per match)
Top scorer(s) Republic of Ireland Robbie Keane (3)
2013

The 2011 Nations Cup (also known as the Carling Nations Cup for sponsorship reasons) was the inaugural round-robin football tournament between the Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales national teams.[1] The first set of two games were played in Dublin in February, with the remaining four games played in May 2011.[1][2][3] It was won by the Republic of Ireland, who won all three of their games without conceding a goal.[4][5]

Contents

Venue

The newly rebuilt Aviva Stadium was chosen to host all six games of the 2011 tournament.

Dublin
Aviva Stadium
Capacity: 51,700
Aviva Stadium(Dublin Arena).JPG

Match Officials

Referees

Standings

Team Pld W D L GF GA GD Pts
 Republic of Ireland 3 3 0 0 9 0 +9 9
 Scotland 3 2 0 1 6 2 +4 6
 Wales 3 1 0 2 3 6 −3 3
 Northern Ireland 3 0 0 3 0 10 −10 0

All times are local.

Fixtures

Republic of Ireland v Wales

8 February 2011
19:45
Republic of Ireland  3 – 0  Wales Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Attendance: 19,783
Referee: Mark Courtney (Northern Ireland)
Gibson Goal 60'
Duff Goal 67'
Fahey Goal 83'
Report
Republic of Ireland
Republic of Ireland:
GK 1 Shay Given (c)
CB 2 Sean St Ledger
LB 3 Ciaran Clark
RB 4 John O'Shea Substituted off in the 85th minute 85'
CB 5 Richard Dunne
CM 6 Glenn Whelan Substituted off in the 76th minute 76'
RM 7 Séamus Coleman Substituted off in the 59th minute 59'
CM 8 Darron Gibson Substituted off in the 81st minute 81'
CF 9 Kevin Doyle Substituted off in the 46th minute 46'
CF 10 Jonathan Walters
LM 11 Damien Duff Substituted off in the 71st minute 71'
Substitutions:
FW 17 Shane Long Substituted on in the 46th minute 46'
MF 18 Keith Fahey Substituted on in the 59th minute 59'
MF 13 Andy Keogh Substituted on in the 71st minute 71'
MF 12 Paul Green Substituted on in the 76th minute 76'
MF 14 Marc Wilson Substituted on in the 81st minute 81'
DF 19 Darren O'Dea Substituted on in the 85th minute 85'
Manager:
Italy Giovanni Trapattoni
Wales
Wales:
GK 1 Wayne Hennessey
RB 2 Neal Eardley Substituted off in the 46th minute 46'
LB 3 Sam Ricketts Substituted off in the 83rd minute 83'
CB 4 Danny Collins
CB 5 James Collins (c)
CM 6 Andrew Crofts
CM 7 David Vaughan Substituted off in the 61st minute 61'
CM 8 Andy King
RF 9 Simon Church
CF 10 Robert Earnshaw Substituted off in the 80th minute 80'
LF 11 Hal Robson-Kanu Substituted off in the 68th minute 68'
Substitutions:
DF 13 Chris Gunter Substituted on in the 46th minute 46'
MF 16 Joe Ledley Substituted on in the 61st minute 61'
MF 15 Freddie Eastwood Substituted on in the 68th minute 68'
FW 14 Jermaine Easter Substituted on in the 80th minute 80'
DF 21 Lewin Nyatanga Substituted on in the 83rd minute 83'
Manager:
Wales Gary Speed

Northern Ireland v Scotland

9 February 2011
19:45
Northern Ireland  0 – 3  Scotland Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Attendance: 18,742
Referee: Tomas Connolly (Republic of Ireland)
Report Miller Goal 19'
McArthur Goal 31'
Commons Goal 51'
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland:
GK 1 Jonathan Tuffey (c)
RB 2 Rory McArdle Substituted off in the 46th minute 46'
LB 3 Chris Baird
CM 4 Gareth McAuley
CB 5 Stephen Craigan Substituted off in the 66th minute 66'
CB 6 Corry Evans
RM 7 Paddy McCourt
CM 8 Steven Davis Substituted off in the 58th minute 58'
CF 9 Rory Patterson
CF 10 Grant McCann Substituted off in the 46th minute 46'
LM 11 Niall McGinn Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
Substitutions:
DF 13 Lee Hodson Substituted on in the 46th minute 46'
FW 15 David Healy Substituted on in the 46th minute 46'
MF 17 Oliver Norwood Substituted on in the 58th minute 58'
MF 14 Adam Thompson Substituted on in the 66th minute 66'
FW 16 Liam Boyce Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
Manager:
Northern Ireland Nigel Worthington
Scotland
Scotland:
GK 1 Allan McGregor
RB 2 Alan Hutton
LB 3 Phil Bardsley Substituted off in the 58th minute 58'
CB 4 Christophe Berra
CB 5 Steven Caldwell
CM 6 Charlie Adam Substituted off in the 58th minute 58'
AM 7 James Morrison Substituted off in the 79th minute 79'
RM 8 Steven Naismith Substituted off in the 58th minute 58'
CF 9 Kenny Miller (c) Substituted off in the 87th minute 87'
LM 11 Kris Commons Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
CM 13 James McArthur
Substitutions:
MF 15 Barry Bannan Substituted on in the 58th minute 58'
DF 16 Mark Wilson Substituted on in the 58th minute 58'
MF 20 Robert Snodgrass Substituted on in the 58th minute 58'
MF 17 Craig Conway Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
FW 19 Chris Maguire Substituted on in the 79th minute 79'
DF 14 Danny Wilson Substituted on in the 87th minute 87'
Manager:
Scotland Craig Levein

Republic of Ireland v Northern Ireland

24 May 2011
19:45
Republic of Ireland  5 – 0  Northern Ireland Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Attendance: 15,083
Referee: Craig Thomson (Scotland)
Ward Goal 24'
Keane Goal 37'54' (pen.)
Cathcart Goal 45' (o.g.)
Cox Goal 80'
Report
Republic of Ireland
Republic of Ireland:
GK 1 Shay Given Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
RB 2 Paul McShane
CB 4 Stephen Kelly
CB 5 Damien Delaney
LB 3 Stephen Ward
CM 6 Kevin Foley Substituted off in the 70th minute 70'
RM 7 Séamus Coleman Substituted off in the 55th minute 55'
CM 8 Keith Andrews
CF 9 Simon Cox
CF 10 Robbie Keane (c) Substituted off in the 62nd minute 62'
LM 11 Keith Treacy
Substitutions:
MF 13 Liam Lawrence Substituted on in the 55th minute 55'
MF 12 Andy Keogh Substituted on in the 62nd minute 62'
MF 17 Stephen Hunt Substituted on in the 70th minute 70'
GK 16 David Forde Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
Manager:
Italy Giovanni Trapattoni
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland:
GK 1 Alan Blayney
RB 2 Adam Thompson Red card 54'
LB 3 Lee Hodson
CB 4 Craig Cathcart
CB 5 Gareth McAuley (c)
RM 6 Sammy Clingan
CM 7 Josh Carson Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
CM 8 Steven Davis Substituted off in the 76th minute 76'
CF 9 Josh McQuoid Substituted off in the 46th minute 46'
CF 10 Warren Feeney Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
LM 11 Johnny Gorman Substituted off in the 56th minute 56'
Substitutions:
MF 14 Oliver Norwood Substituted on in the 46th minute 46'
DF 13 Colin Coates Substituted on in the 56th minute 56'
MF 15 Niall McGinn Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
FW 16 Liam Boyce Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
MF 17 Robert Garrett Substituted on in the 76th minute 76'
Manager:
Northern Ireland Nigel Worthington

Wales v Scotland

25 May 2011
19:45
Wales  1 – 3  Scotland Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Attendance: 6,036
Referee: Raymond Crangle (Northern Ireland)
Earnshaw Goal 36' Report Morrison Goal 55'
Miller Goal 63'
Berra Goal 70'
Wales
Wales:
GK 1 Boaz Myhill
RB 2 Neal Eardley Substituted off in the 61st minute 61'
LB 3 Neil Taylor Substituted off in the 46th minute 46'
CM 4 Owain Tudur Jones Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
CB 5 Craig Morgan
CB 6 Darcy Blake
CM 7 Andy Dorman Substituted off in the 61st minute 61'
CM 8 Andy King Substituted off in the 61st minute 61'
CF 9 Sam Vokes Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
CF 10 Robert Earnshaw (c)
CF 11 Jermaine Easter
Substitutions:
DF 13 Chris Gunter Substituted on in the 46th minute 46'
MF 17 Aaron Ramsey Substituted on in the 61st minute 61'
DF 18 Adam Matthews Substituted on in the 61st minute 61'
MF 19 David Cotterill Substituted on in the 61st minute 61'
MF 16 David Vaughan Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
FW 20 Steve Morison Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
Manager:
Wales Gary Speed
Scotland
Scotland:
GK 1 Allan McGregor
RB 2 Steven Whittaker Substituted off in the 81st minute 81'
LB 3 Stephen Crainey Substituted off in the 81st minute 81'
CB 4 Christophe Berra
CB 5 Gary Caldwell Substituted off in the 84th minute 84'
LM 6 James Morrison Substituted off in the 74th minute 74'
CF 7 Ross McCormack Substituted off in the 74th minute 74'
CM 8 Scott Brown
CF 9 Kenny Miller (c)
CM 10 Charlie Adam Substituted off in the 88th minute 88'
RM 11 Steven Naismith
Substitutions:
MF 16 Barry Robson Substituted on in the 74th minute 74'
MF 18 Barry Bannan Substituted on in the 74th minute 74'
DF 14 Phil Bardsley Substituted on in the 81st minute 81'
DF 20 Russell Martin Substituted on in the 81st minute 81'
DF 22 Grant Hanley Substituted on in the 84th minute 84'
MF 13 James McArthur Substituted on in the 88th minute 88'
Manager:
Scotland Craig Levein

Wales v Northern Ireland

27 May 2011
19:45
Wales  2 – 0  Northern Ireland Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Attendance: 529
Referee: Alan Kelly (Republic of Ireland)
Ramsey Goal 36'
Earnshaw Goal 69'
Report
Wales
Wales:
GK 1 Wayne Hennessey Substituted off in the 74th minute 74'
DF 2 Chris Gunter Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
DF 3 Neil Taylor
MF 4 Jack Collison Substituted off in the 61st minute 61'
DF 5 Danny Collins
DF 6 Danny Gabbidon
AM 7 David Cotterill
CF 8 Craig Bellamy Substituted off in the 61st minute 61'
CF 9 Steve Morison Substituted off in the 80th minute 80'
MF 10 Aaron Ramsey (c) Substituted off in the 89th minute 89'
MF 11 David Vaughan
Substitutions:
CF 17 Robert Earnshaw Substituted on in the 61st minute 61'
MF 16 Owain Tudur Jones Substituted on in the 61st minute 61'
DF 13 Adam Matthews Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
GK 12 Lewis Price Substituted on in the 74th minute 74'
CF 18 Sam Vokes Substituted on in the 80th minute 80'
MF 19 Andy Dorman Substituted on in the 89th minute 89'
Manager:
Wales Gary Speed
Northern Ireland
Northern Ireland:
GK 1 Jonathan Tuffey
DF 2 Lee Hodson
DF 3 Colin Coates
DF 4 Craig Cathcart Substituted off in the 61st minute 61'
DF 5 Gareth McAuley (c)
MF 6 Oliver Norwood
MF 7 Josh Carson
MF 8 Robert Garrett Substituted off in the 75th minute 75'
MF 9 Niall McGinn Substituted off in the 80th minute 80'
FW 10 Warren Feeney Substituted off in the 72nd minute 72'
FW 11 Johnny Gorman
Substitutions:
MF 15 Stuart Dallas Substituted on in the 61st minute 61'
FW 14 Liam Boyce Substituted on in the 72nd minute 72'
DF 13 Carl Winchester Substituted on in the 75th minute 75'
FW 16 Jordan Owens Substituted on in the 80th minute 80'
Manager:
Northern Ireland Nigel Worthington

Republic of Ireland v Scotland

29 May 2011
18:30
Republic of Ireland  1 – 0  Scotland Aviva Stadium, Dublin
Attendance: 17,694
Referee: Mark Whitby (Wales)
Keane Goal 23' Report
Republic of Ireland
Republic of Ireland:
GK 1 Shay Given
CB 2 Paul McShane Booked in the 42nd minute 42'
LB 3 Stephen Ward
RB 4 Stephen Kelly
CB 5 Darren O'Dea Substituted off in the 66th minute 66'
CM 6 Keith Fahey Booked in the 48th minute 48'
RM 7 Liam Lawrence Substituted off in the 62nd minute 62'
CM 8 Keith Andrews Booked in the 90th minute 90'
CF 9 Simon Cox
CF 10 Robbie Keane (c) Substituted off in the 83rd minute 83'
LM 11 Stephen Hunt
Substitutions:
MF 13 Séamus Coleman Substituted on in the 62nd minute 62'
DF 12 Kevin Foley Booked in the 73rd minute 73' Substituted on in the 66th minute 66'
MF 15 Keith Treacy Substituted on in the 83rd minute 83'
Manager:
Italy Giovanni Trapattoni
Scotland
Scotland:
GK 1 Allan McGregor
RB 2 Steven Whittaker
LB 3 Phil Bardsley
CB 4 Christophe Berra
CB 5 Grant Hanley
RM 6 Barry Robson Substituted off in the 75th minute 75'
LM 7 James Forrest Substituted off in the 85th minute 85'
CM 8 Scott Brown
CF 9 Kenny Miller (c) Booked in the 76th minute 76'
CM 10 Charlie Adam Booked in the 62nd minute 62' Substituted off in the 63rd minute 63'
CF 11 Steven Naismith
Substitutions:
MF 16 Barry Bannan Substituted on in the 63rd minute 63'
MF 19 Chris Maguire Substituted on in the 75th minute 75'
FW 17 Ross McCormack Substituted on in the 85th minute 85'
Manager:
Scotland Craig Levein

Scorers

3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
1 goal (own goal)

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.[6]

Criticism

The Football Association of Ireland has been criticised by the media, supporters and other football associations for high ticket prices. The 51,700-capacity Aviva Stadium was less than half-full for all of the games.[7][8] 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.

Northern Ireland fans were criticised for singing sectarian chants at games,[9] while during the game between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland, Republic fans booed "God Save the Queen", the national anthem of Northern Ireland, and Northern Ireland fans booed the President of Ireland, Mary McAleese, as she greeted players before the game.[10][11] Scotland fans also booed "God Save the Queen", when playing Northern Ireland.[12]

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.[13][14]

References

  1. ^ a b Forbes, Craig (13 August 2010). "England no great loss to Nations Cup, says Burley". The Scotsman (Johnston Press Digital Publishing). http://sport.scotsman.com/sport/England-no-great-loss-to.6473273.jp. Retrieved 13 August 2010. 
  2. ^ "Dates Announced For 4 Associations' Tournament In Dublin 2011". faw.org.uk (Football Association of Wales). 25 March 2009. Archived from the original on 29 March 2009. http://www.faw.org.uk/news/1299. Retrieved 26 March 2009. 
  3. ^ "4 Associations Tournament Announced for Dublin 2011". fai.ie (Football Association of Ireland). 18 September 2008. http://www.fai.ie/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3607. Retrieved 28 February 2010. 
  4. ^ "Robbie Keane earns Ireland deciding win over Scotland in Nations Cup". Guardian. 29 May 2011. http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/may/29/republic-ireland-scotland-nations-cup. Retrieved 31 May 2011. 
  5. ^ "Keane equals record and secures title". Irish Times. 30 May 2011. http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/sport/2011/0530/1224298057541.html. Retrieved 31 May 2011. 
  6. ^ "Carling Nations Cup announces broadcast partnership with Sky Sports 3D". fai.ie (Football Association of Ireland). 17 December 2001. Archived from the original on 4 January 2011. http://www.fai.ie/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=101465:carling-nations-cup-announces-broadcast-partnership-with-sky-sports-3d&catid=1:senior-men&Itemid=8. Retrieved 8 February 2011. 
  7. ^ "Norn Iron fans set to stage Aviva boycott". JOE.ie. 11 May 2011. http://www.joe.ie/football/international-football/norn-iron-fans-set-to-stage-aviva-boycott-0012119-1. Retrieved 25 May 2011. 
  8. ^ "Ghost town expected at the Aviva Stadium". JOE.ie. 24 May 2011. http://www.joe.ie/football/international-football/ghost-town-at-the-aviva-stadium-0012455-1. Retrieved 25 May 2011. 
  9. ^ "Anger at Sectarian songs after NI game". UTV. 15 February 2011. http://www.u.tv/news/Anger-at-sectarian-songs-after-NI-game/c62e592b-b5ae-4087-bc2e-26eafb3c7ace. Retrieved 25 May 2011. 
  10. ^ "Bragging rights for Republic". Examiner. 24 May 2011. http://www.examiner.ie/sport/bragging-rights-for-republic-155711.html. Retrieved 25 May 2011. 
  11. ^ "As it happened: Republic of Ireland v Northern Ireland". TheScore.ie. 24 May 2011. http://www.thescore.ie/live-republic-of-ireland-v-northern-ireland-143044-May2011/. Retrieved 25 May 2011. 
  12. ^ Murray, Euan (9 February 2011). "Scotland sweep aside Northern Ireland in Nations Cup". The Guardian (London: Guardian News and Media). http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/feb/09/scotland-northern-ireland-nations-cup. Retrieved 10 February 2011. 
  13. ^ "Wales manager Gary Speed condemns Charlie Adam's challenge". The Guardian (London: Guardian News and Media). 26 May 2011. http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/may/26/wales-northern-ireland-carling-nations-cup. Retrieved 28 May 2011. 
  14. ^ "Wales are Carling Cup 'poor relations' says Gary Speed". BBC News (BBC). 25 May 2011. Archived from the original on 27 May 2011. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/13552717.stm. Retrieved 29 May 2011. 

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