It was mission accomplished for boss Brian Kerr as the Republic of Ireland
gained a semblance of revenge for the agony they suffered at the hands of
Switzerland 11 months ago.
Kerr had demanded four points from his side's opening two World Cup qualifying
matches and his players duly delivered courtesy of an outstanding display of
goalkeeping from Shay Given.
However, this was a game Ireland could still have won, although there is no
doubt Kerr will feel this was a deserved, hard-won point from an often-bitter
clash which simmered, but just failed to spill over into an outright feud.
The pre-match hype had centred around words like 'revenge' and 'pay-back', but
talk is cheap unless underlined by actions, and that is exactly what Ireland
achieved inside eight minutes at Basle's St Jakob Park.
Kerr's side were determined to exact retribution for last October's 2-0 defeat
by the Swiss at this same venue, a result which brought a shuddering halt to
their hopes of reaching the European Championships finals.
Some of the Ireland players had harped on about poor gamesmanship from the
Swiss, while Clinton Morrison suggested he had been racially abused by Alexander
Frei.
Frei, however, was completing a two-match ban and thus avoided a potentially
heated confrontation with the Birmingham forward
But Morrison was still eager to make Switzerland pay, and when he met a
perfect Damien Duff cross from the left wing with a glancing header into the
bottom left-hand corner, his delight was obvious.
The goal, the seventh of his Ireland career, was a replica of the Group Four
opener in the 3-0 win over Cyprus at Lansdowne Road on Saturday, but unlike in
that encounter, Kerr's side could not build on their advantage.
Instead, they were indebted to Given who proceeded to produce an outstanding
five-minute display of goalkeeping, pulling off three world-class saves to
preserve his side's lead.
The first came in the 10th minute with Given at full stretch in tipping on to
the bar a rasping 25-yard free-kick from Murat Yakin after Stephen Carr had been
booked for a shove on Alexandre Rey.
Two minutes later and a woeful pass from Roy Keane, who shook off a rib injury
to make his first competitive appearance for the Irish for almost three years,
was deflected off Johann Vonlanthen into the path of Rey.
But the Neuchatal Xamax striker, who rattled a hat-trick past the hapless
Faroe Islands in a 6-0 victory on Saturday, was denied by the outstretched left
foot of Given.
It was Given's right boot that saved the Republic again in the 14th minute as
debutant Tranquillo Barnetta split the defence with an incisive through ball for
Hakan Yakin, only for the Newcastle goalkeeper to again spread-eagle himself and
deny the Swiss.
But the goal was coming and in the 17th minute Switzerland duly equalised as
Barnetta again played in Hakan Yakin, and this time he made no mistake with an
angled left-foot shot across Given for his 14th goal in 38 internationals.
Ireland were on the ropes, but they weathered the storm and indeed should have
headed into the break with their lead restored, but twice spurned the chances
that came their way.
Morrison should have buried a headed knock back from Robbie Keane to a Duff
far-post cross, but his header was down into the turf, allowing Pascal
Zuberbuhler to clear the danger before an altercation and a scramble ensued in
front of him.
It resulted in Keane being shown the yellow card by Greek referee Kyros
Vassaras as he duelled with Murat Yakin, much to the 33-year-old's obvious
disgust.
But Ireland were alive again and in the 33rd minute were denied again, with
Zuberbuhler diving to his right to keep out Robbie Keane's angled shot, and from
the rebound West Brom defender Bernt Haas blocked Kevin Kilbane's right-foot
drive.
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the second-half failed to scale the opportunistic
heights of the first as both sides tightened up and a tetchy, often petulant,
battle followed.
Inevitably, Keane was involved and one challenge from behind on Switzerland
skipper Johann Vogel could have led to a second yellow and subsequent red from
some officials, but Vasseras opted for a quiet word.
The crowd were incensed, and it again heightened the tension, only eased when
dangerman Hakan Yakin unleashed a bullet of a 25-yard left-foot drive in the
70th minute which was bound for the top right-hand corner until Given's
outstanding intervention.
It was fitting Given should have had what was technically the last word, and
Ireland can now march on Paris next month and a game with the Patrick
Vieira-less France with confidence high.
TeamsSwitzerland Zuberbuhler, Haas, Muller, Murat Yakin, Magnin,
Vogel, Barnetta, Cabanas, Hakan Yakin, Vonlanthen (Lonfat 73),
Rey.
Subs Not Used: Roth, Berner, Henchoz, Grichting, Huggel,
Haberli.
Booked: Haas, Hakan Yakin.
Goals: Hakan Yakin 17.
Rep of Ireland Given, Carr, O'Brien, Cunningham, Finnan,
Andy Reid (Kavanagh 73), Roy Keane, Kilbane, Duff,
Robbie Keane, Morrison (Doherty 84).
Subs Not Used: Breen, Maybury, Quinn, Kenny, Barrett.
Booked: Carr, Morrison, Roy Keane.
Goals: Morrison 8.
Att: 28,000
Ref: Kyros Vassaras (Greece).