As far as I know, Tuesday 6th February 2007 still remains a record breaking day for London, when the city hosted no less than 4 international rugby fixtures on the same night. It has become quite a norm over recent years for the city to host football games of nations other than England, and this probably best indicates the cosmopolitan nature of the city and the huge variety of people and cultures you will find here.
Friday night was another example, when the Republic of Ireland took on the Super Eagles of Nigeria in a friendly football international at Fulham's Craven Cottage. Keen to experience the atmosphere of an international football game, I joined 11,262 other supporters (I counted them).
It really was a fantastic experience, with the Irish supporters slightly outnumbering the Nigerian supporters - but not by many.
The game was played in an excellent spirit, and the Scottish referee never had to produce a single yellow card in the 90 minutes.
The first half was all action. The Nigerians playing a far more muscular and robust brand of football, over the more European style of technical passing and precision of the Irish (perhaps instilled by manager, Giovanni Trapattoni.) However, for all their endeavour, the Irish team found it difficult to click together and it was in fact the Nigerians who played a better passing game, ultimately leading to them opening the scoring through Michael Eneramo just on the half hour.
The Republic of Ireland, spurred on by a massively noisy group of supporters, tried to respond, but still found it difficult. After 38 minutes however, they did manage to round off a sweeping move when Keith Andrews split the Nigerian defence and found Robbie Keane who rounded the Nigerian keeping, slotting home into an unguarded net.
The iconic Republic captain almost brought the house down, with the supporters chanting his name boisterously, and Keane taking the applause, acknowledging each stand in turn.
The second half was a completely different affair. Three substitutions by Ireland, including Keane, brought a different complexion to the game, and whilst they did threaten the Nigerian goal in the first 10 minutes of the half, Ireland still couldn't break down a stubborn defence, nor quite click their passing game together. With about 20 minutes of the game left, the crowd appeared to have settled for a draw, if the players hadn't, and a Mexican wave was started... An indication of the state of play at that time was that the wave went around Craven Cottage about 6 or 7 times without interruption.
The evening's entertainment drew to a close and the final result was the 1-1 draw.
It was a fantastic evening, a great experience and a very good first attendance at international football.
And with the number of international games that London regularly hosts, I am looking forward to my next game.
Saturday, 30 May 2009
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I belive it was the Republic of Ireland and not Northern Ireland playing. Enjoyable read, thanks
ReplyDeleteAnd you would be quite correct...
ReplyDeleteThanks for the correction to my glaring error.
Edit made in my original post.
You HAVE to go to Twickenham when the Boks are playing some time!! Awesome atmosphere...especially when the green and gold win!
ReplyDelete