Áine O’Gorman hits the century as Ireland hit last chance saloon

Player hoping for two reasons to celebrate in Ireland’s must-win match against Norway

Ireland’s Áine O’Gorman and Caroline Graham Hansen of Norway at last Friday’s qualifier in Tallaght Stadium, which Norway won 2-0. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho
Ireland’s Áine O’Gorman and Caroline Graham Hansen of Norway at last Friday’s qualifier in Tallaght Stadium, which Norway won 2-0. Photograph: Ryan Byrne/Inpho

Women’s World Cup Group Three qualifier

Norway v Republic of Ireland

Viking Arena (Tuesday 5pm Irish time, Live RTÉ 2).

The last Ireland player to hit the century mark of caps finished the night in Gelsenkirchen held aloft, and Áine O’Gorman would settle for her own dose of euphoria upon reaching the milestone on Tuesday evening in Norway.

Unlike John O'Shea's big night in Germany almost four years ago, the women have a must-win qualifier on the occasion of O'Gorman's celebration. Colin Bell's side require an unlikely victory in the penultimate fixture of the campaign in Stavanger to stand any chance of claiming a play-off into next year's World Cup in France.

O’Gorman and her colleagues have an insight as to the scale of the task fresh in their minds, having fallen only last Friday to a convincing 2-0 defeat against the same opposition at Tallaght Stadium.

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Opening win

It was the first international for the Enniskerry native since the opening win over Northern Ireland last September. The medial knee ligament injury sustained in Lurgan that night was compounded by dental trouble on her return, leaving the 29-year-old feeling a tad detached from the ground made during her absence.

Áine O’Gorman: “This is the closest we’ve come to qualifying since reaching a play-off 10 years ago but I believe we can do it.” Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho
Áine O’Gorman: “This is the closest we’ve come to qualifying since reaching a play-off 10 years ago but I believe we can do it.” Photograph: Bryan Keane/Inpho

Two more wins over Slovakia, sandwiched in between by the famous draw against the Netherlands last November, generated a degree of expectation that a first major tournament could be reached, only for consecutive home defeats against the higher seeds pushing them into last-chance saloon territory.

Unavailable

Harriet Scott will once again be unavailable through injury, with Diane Caldwell another absentee through suspension. Yet another centre-back, Louise Quinn, will start replete with a mask to protect the broken nose she suffered five days ago.

“A lot has changed in the set-up since I made my debut at 16 against Denmark,” said O’Gorman. “This is the closest we’ve come to qualifying since reaching a play-off 10 years ago but I believe we can do it. Although Norway are strong, they have weakness we can exploit.”

Only three points on Tuesday night will suffice for their final game against Northern Ireland on August 31st to hold relevance for their qualification quest.