Shane-Long

Mark O’Haire’s Euro Tips – Rep of Ireland v Sweden

Group E kicks off on Monday evening from the Stade de France with Republic of Ireland and Sweden knowing victory could hold all the aces in the race to qualify for the knockout stages.

Republic of Ireland v Sweden, Monday 13th June 17.00, BBC1
Being pitted alongside Belgium and Italy, both nations will be well aware of the magnitude of their opening match with two devilishly difficult games to follow in the pool. The duo progressed via the play-offs and the two teams do appear well-matched for their Parisian meeting.

The Boys In Green arrive in France with the oldest squad and a degree of dread following their failed and abysmal efforts in 2012. Failure to win a warm-up match has seen doubts creep into the normally optimistic fan base after what was a memorable qualification campaign.

Euros Crossbar

Ireland’s never-say-die attitude invoked by head coach Martin O’Neill and assistant Roy Keane was pivotal and lady luck smiled down on the side as they managed to sneak four points from goals in the 90th minute or later, as well as downing the World Champions in Dublin.

However, the Republic scored just eight times in their eight qualifiers, excluding the matches against Gibraltar. And in games against Germany, Poland and Scotland (W1-D3-L2) the Boys in Green were out-shot 33-55, returning a worrying low shot ratio figure of 37.5%.

Green Wall
But there are positives. Ireland shipped only seven goals in a group that saw Germany and Poland rattle in 57 goals between them and although the squad is lacking any major stars, the resilience instilled has made the Irish tricky customers to overcome.

The Republic have rediscovered their belief and ambition under O’Neill and their hard-working ethos has made the most out of a limited but often effective game-plan. However, their success against the Swedes is likely to boil down to how they handle Zlatan Ibrahimovic.

No side at Euro 2016 are more reliant on just one player than Sweden.

The Blue-Yellow captain is the Swedes’ all-time top goalscorer and is absolutely the essential to their success under Eric Hamren.

Head coach Hamren is happy to admit his side must focus their entire system around their one and only world class player, knowing cocksure Zlatan has the ability to turn any defence upside down.

The skipper’s importance to the cause was clear to see during the nation’s play-off victory over Denmark – their first against their great rivals since 2000 – when Zlatan scored three of the Blue-Yellow’s four goals, including a sumptuous free-kick in the second leg to confirm qualification.

Hamren works hard to massage Zlatan’s precious ego but it’s well worth the effort – 62 goals in 112 national team appearances is a record that won’t be beaten and that includes 11 goals on the path to France.

Since Euro 2012, Ibrahimovic has scored in 19 of Sweden’s 21 meaningful matches, laying on six assists, meaning he’s played a major role in 74% of the Blue Yellows’ competitive goals across the last four years.

When Zlatan hasn’t scored or assisted, Sweden have failed to win a game in that four-year sample.

And of the eight matches he’s missed, Hamren’s men picked up just a solitary victory, against lowly Liechtenstein.

Despite Ibrahimovic’s exploits, qualifying wasn’t a walk in the park. The Swedes drew three of their first four and failed to beat top-two finishers Austria and Russia. So if Ireland can stop the supply and influence, they stand an excellent chance of at least picking up a point.

Tight Affair
Interestingly, Zlatan’s failed to score in three previous games against the Irish and although Sweden boast a W5-D2-L3 head-to-head record, the pre-match favourites have fired blanks in three of their last four duels.

A draw (2/1) looks the most likely scenario in a low-scoring contest. Eight of Sweden’s 12 qualifiers featured fewer than three goals but the Blue Yellow have netted in all bar three of their 24 competitive outings since Euro 2012.

The Irish have only been silenced on four occasions in the same sample and with nine of the Republic’s 10 qualifiers (excluding Gibraltar) also rewarding Under 2.5 Goals backers, it looks like an opportunity for us to enter the correct score market – the 1-1 is available to support at 5/1.

Recommended Bets:
Draw @ 2/1
1-1 correct score @ 5/1

*Prices correct at time of publication.




[fbcomments]
IE_NOT_SUPORRTED