‘You shouldn’t be losing at home to Greece’ - Stephen Kenny declines to discuss Ireland future

Ireland have taken just three points from their first six Euro 2024 qualifiers

Ireland manager Stephen Kenny reacts during the Euro 2024 qualifier against Greece at the Aviva Stadium. Photograph: Charles McQuillan/Getty Images
Ireland manager Stephen Kenny reacts during the Euro 2024 qualifier against Greece at the Aviva Stadium. Photograph: Charles McQuillan/Getty Images

Beleaguered Republic of Ireland boss Stephen Kenny declined to discuss his future after a deeply damaging 2-0 home defeat by Greece finally ended hopes of automatic qualification for Euro 2024.

Ireland were decidedly second-best at the Aviva Stadium and will head to the Algarve to play Gibraltar on Monday evening having taken just three points from their first six qualifiers.

However, asked about his tenure, Kenny said: “I’m not going to use this to speak about that.

“Ultimately of course we’re disappointed. We knew it was a group of death, tough games. France, Holland, really tough. We had epic games against both of them.

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“You shouldn’t be losing at home to Greece. They are a good team, better than people think they are, technically very good with good qualities.

“We needed to win tonight, I know that.”

Kenny had gone into the game under pressure, but with the FAI having indicated he would remain in charge until the end of the campaign whatever happened.

Asked this week if the results in these two fixtures could change the association’s stance, chief executive Jonathan Hill said: “No, I don’t think so.

“We’re committed to that process of reviewing the whole of the qualification process in November.”

Whether that is still the case after a dark night at the Aviva Stadium remains to be seen.

The brutal truth is that Kenny’s 27 competitive matches at the helm have yielded just five victories – against Azerbaijan, Luxembourg, Scotland, Armenia and Gibraltar – with only a 3-0 Nations League success against the Scots in June 2022 backing the manager’s claims of progress.

Opposite number Gus Poyet, who reacted angrily to accusations that he had used Irish spies to plot victory in the reverse fixture, was delighted with his team’s efforts in Dublin, which left them three points ahead of Monday’s opponents the Netherlands having played a game more.

He said: “I think we’re learning, I think we’re growing up. I think the players are understanding that to qualify for the Euros and then to perform in the Euros, we still need a little bit more, and I think Monday is going to be massive.

“There are plenty of things that we need to do well on Monday and depending on that, how much we grow up as a team, I think we’re going to be in a better position to qualify.

“But I have to say, we have put ourselves there with our victories, with our work somehow, and if you’d asked me before we started when I was in Frankfurt for the draw and you said to me that we would be here now with this chance to qualify, I would have taken it.”