Roy Keane says Stephen Kenny and his crew’s celebration after Troy Parrott’s goal against Lithuania was “excessive”.
Parrott rescued the Irish Reds during a break with the winner in a narrow 1-0 win over the Baltic states that night, when they conceded four offside goals.
The Spurs striker, currently on loan to MK Dons, scored his third highest international goal after Chidozhi Ojen twice, Conor Hurricane and Scott Hogan.
The goal sparked celebration both on and off the field when Kenny hugged his assistant Kate Andrews, but Kane was not happy, the Irish Mirror reported.
He told ITV, “It was a huge victory. Better late than never, but they worked hard for it.”
“I think the celebration is very high at the end. But an important milestone, even for Parrott, is the presence of a young player.
“Maybe his career stalled for a while. But they kept going. Show some wits and some struggle. Get that victory. Feel good factor. Keep it up. A little bit of momentum.
“Honestly. From here on up. For executives, staff and players. Respond this way for a friendly victory. Come here! Get rid of him.”
Kane’s comments came after Andrews denied the Manchester United legend’s claim that he was a “bull”.
Kane gave a brief character to Andrews in an interview two months after Kenny and his Dublin colleague were promoted from Ireland to their senior positions in 2020.
“If I can say one thing about the new Irish staff, I’ve heard a lot of revolutionary rumors over the past 10 years and Kate Andrews has been one of the best of them all,” said Kane, clearly referring to Andrews. Work as a media expert.
Notes by Irish Director Stephen Keane (Photo: © INPHO / Evan Treacy)
The 41-year-old has resigned from the media to focus on his Irish duties and did not complete his official media duties until Monday of this week.
Asked about Kane’s comments ahead of Tuesday’s friendly against Lithuania, Andrew replied: “You should probably ask why.
“As for how that affected me, it didn’t affect me at all.
“I have already mentioned my passion for this role.
“My conscience will be very, very pure in what I put into it, because apart from family life, that is the only thing that interests me: in terms of improving this team, Irish football. In terms of giving, we are a team we are proud to watch.
“Obviously I was a fan, I was a player, this is my only team, this is the only team I care about.
“So no, it didn’t affect me. When you go to a new job, players pick you up very quickly if you’re not up to par.
“So in terms of training, it was clear that he was at a high level.”
Source: Belfastlive

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