International Friendly

March 2, 2010

Full-time

Ireland

0 - 2

Brazil

International Friendly

20:05 GMT, March 2, 2010

Emirates Stadium, England

Referee: Mike Dean

Robinho stars on return to England

Scoring Summary

Ireland Brazil
 Keith Andrews (og 44')
 Robinho (76')

The Republic of Ireland were out of luck once again as an own goal from Keith Andrews set Brazil on their way to a 2-0 victory at Emirates Stadium.

• Palmer: Dunga still has plenty to ponder
• Trapattoni bemoans offical's "special eyes"

Giovanni Trapattoni's men had controversially missed out on a World Cup place in South Africa this summer following a play-off defeat to France, where former Arsenal striker Thierry Henry handled the ball in the lead up to Les Bleus winning goal.

There was more misfortune in Tuesday's glamour friendly against the five-time world champions, as just before half time Andrews deflected Robinho's centre past Shay Given - winning a new record 103rd cap along with defender Kevin Kilbane - and the former Manchester City striker then netted a well-executed second with 14 minutes left.

While Brazil coach Dunga can look forward to fine-tuning the final preparations for his squad's opening game against North Korea in Johannesburg on June 15, the Irish will once again be left to reflect on what might have been - but on tonight's battling performance should go into the qualifying campaign for the 2012 European Championships with genuine optimism.

It had been a bright start by Ireland, with captain Robbie Keane - taking his place in the starting XI after initially pulling out of the squad because of a slight knee injury - got away down the right and ghosted back inside before his low shot was smothered at the near post by Julio Cesar.

If the Brazilians thought they would be in for an easy ride, they were given a sharp wake-up call when Stoke midfielder Glenn Whelan checked the run of Michel Bastos. Damien Duff, the Fulham winger, looked dangerous down the left channel, while Paul McShane headed over from a corner.

Brazil, though, continued in their fluid formation, as Kaka weaved his way into the Ireland box before being dispossessed on the goal-line and then drilling a 20-yard shot just over. It was Ireland, however, who almost snatched the lead on 15 minutes when Kevin Doyle's close-range header was palmed away by the Brazil keeper.

Only some desperate defending then kept the yellow shirts at bay after Robinho fed Adriano on the edge of the box. The Flamengo forward was tackled by Stephen Kelly before McShane blocked the follow-up effort from the former City striker.

The South Americans were queuing up to take a free-kick after McShane's foul on Kaka some 25 yards out, with Adriano eventually whipping the ball up towards goal, which Given tipped over.

St Ledger flashed the ball across the Brazil six-yard box with an overhead kick, but nobody gambled at the far post and Ireland's luck deserted them for the second match in succession as Brazil took the lead a minute before the break.

Robinho looked offside when he dashed into the right side of the penalty area, before pulling a low pass back across goal, which the unfortunate Keith Andrews deflected past Given.

Both managers resisted the temptation to make wholesale changes for the second half, going again with the same XI. Blackburn midfielder Andrews squared up to Kaka after the duo clashed on the edge of the Ireland penalty area, English referee Mike Dean soon restoring calm with a stern word.

Trapattoni made the first changes of the evening when Manchester United youngster Darren Gibson and Aiden McGeady replaced Whelan and Duff after 56 minutes.

Brazil, though, continued to press as Maicon skipped into the Ireland box, and his close-range shot hit St Ledger. It should have been 2-0 moments later, when, with his first touch, substitute Daniel Alves robbed St Ledger and raced clear to round Given - but could only stab his shot wide.

The assistant's flag saved McShane's blushes when he was robbed by Maicon, as in feeding Robinho, Brazil were caught offside as they put the ball in the net.

With 21 minutes left, highly-rated Wigan teenager James McCarthy was handed his full international debut, replacing Liam Lawrence. Former City man Robinho, officially only on loan at Santos, then blazed over before slotting home a text-book second after good work from Kaka and a neat one-two with substitute Grafite.

  • Trapattoni bemoans official's "special eyes"

    Republic of Ireland boss Giovanni Trapattoni was left to rue another poor decision from officials in his side's first match since Thierry Henry's infamous handball in Paris.

    "We saw 45 minutes of a very, very beautiful game,'' Trapattoni said. "I think we played the same level as Brazil and thought we could have continued at that level and would have not lost.

    "With their goal the referee has 'special eyes' in this friendly game. The first goal was offside. If we finished the first half 0-0, the Brazil approach for the second half would have been different because psychologically they would go to win.''

    Robinho set up the first goal when he raced through and crossed for Keith Andrews to turn into his own goal, and then he added the second himself in the second period.

    It meant a happy return to England for Robinho, who endured a disappointing first half of the season with Manchester City before being loaned to Santos.

    "You can see he is happy again,'' Brazil coach Dunga said. "He needs the ball at his foot and to play well to be happy. With his effort on the pitch, he showed all of us what he can do. Robinho is always someone who has great emotion for the national team.''

    Despite holding Brazil for almost a half, Trapattoni admitted he saw little chance of the Republic earning a result in the second half and decided to rest some of his players from the Premier League.

    "We made two or three easy mistakes and gave them two great opportunities and they could have scored more,'' Trapattoni admitted. "After 50 minutes it was clear it was not possible for us because we lost strength. It was clear they weren't fit enough to last 90 minutes.

    "I wanted to rest the players who play in the Premier League, I'm thinking about my English colleagues as well. I knew we couldn't come back from the result.''

    With fellow Italian Fabio Capello watching in the stands, Trapattoni feels Brazil could be the team to beat at the World Cup.

    "I think they are a strong team and a great squad,'' he said. "Brazil have quality. When there is a opportunity to score a goal, they normally take it.''

    Dunga believes he is in the final stage of preparations for South Africa.

    "We have to work with 23 players, we have to create our group and know which players we can swap or not swap,'' he said. "Everything is almost clear for us. We have different options depending on how we need to play.

    "To be favourites or not doesn't mean anything, we have to play. For me it is a surprise that we are favourites because I have been reading that all the players in the Brazil team have been playing badly in Europe.''

    Dunga left Ronaldinho out of his squad to face Ireland, but he said: "Pele was once the best player in the world. I played once as well. Players come and players go. We have the team decided but we need certain things defined.''