Shamrock Rovers ace Sean Hoare explains what went wrong in ...

6 days ago

SEÁN HOARE has admitted things have gone wrong for Shamrock Rovers at both ends of the pitch this season.

Shamrock Rovers - Figure 1
Photo The Irish Sun

But he hopes that a strong September can ensure the Hoops — who host Sligo Rovers tonight — are still competing on two fronts later this year.

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Hoare admits things have gone wrong for Shamrock Rovers at both ends of the pitch

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Leon Pohls has struggled to fill longtime goalkeeper Alan Mannus' boots

The four-in-a-row champions currently lie sixth in the table, and even if they were to win their two games in hand they would still be eight points off leaders Shelbourne with seven matches left.

With five league games to go before their first Europa Conference League fixture against APOEL Nicosia in 20 days’ time, there is an opportunity to make up some ground.

And Hoare said: “We haven’t covered ourselves in glory in the league this year obviously, a good September and things can look different for us, put pressure on teams ahead of us and ask the question, that’s all we can do.

“Top three is still the target and it’s so close, we have games in hand and it’s been close with all the teams around us, there’s a lot of points to play for and until it’s mathematically done, we keep going.

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“We have shown that fight over the years, you don’t win four leagues in a row without a couple of slip-ups and hiccups, we bounced back from them so we keep going, never say die.

Shamrock Rovers - Figure 2
Photo The Irish Sun

“We have done it before, we know how to come back, we’ve not been top of the league for four years straight, it’s been up and down, we know how to do it, it’s fresh in our minds. 

“I know from winning that first league, the closer you get, the shakier you get.

“There’s plenty of twists and turns, everyone has to play each other, it gets shaky the closer you get, it is out of our hands, it’s not up to us but we keep going.”

Hoare’s explanation for Rovers’ struggles is simple, not scoring enough goals and conceding too many at the other end — and that is borne out by the statistics. 

Their defence is the most porous it has been since 2017 and they are the least prolific they have been in a decade. 

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Hoare, 30, sighed: “The amount of goals we’ve conceded this year, stupid goals, and we’re not ruthless enough in the final third — it seems we need to score two or three to win a game.

“In previous seasons we were built on clean sheets and you only had to score one to win a game.”

Alan Mannus retired at the end of last season having being Rovers’ first-choice keeper since August 2018 in his second stint, with Leon Pohls stepping up since.

And Hoare said: “It’s going to be a transition, we felt that Leon was ready and it’s hard coming in, it’s a lonely position there and I don’t envy him at all. But as a defence you are a collective.”

MISFIRE

Up front, he reckons Rory Gaffney’s long lay-off has been costly, with Aaron Greene also currently sidelined, though the defeat to Bohemians at the start of the month was the first league game he has missed.

Hoare said: “I don’t think anything has changed massively since last year but we have been leaking goals, we lost Rory for most of the season, lost Greener at crucial times.

"They are our lead goalscorers from recent seasons, so when you are leaking goals and not scoring as many, that’s what I put it down to.

“Nothing has changed, our mentality, training, they have not changed.”

But he also admitted that the emergence of Shels as the main threat came as a surprise.

Hoare added: “I’d have said Derry as they pushed us last year but Shels have done unbelievable.

"They seem a good unit, seem to be fighting for each other, and the table doesn’t lie.”

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