By Our man in Doha
DOHA, Qatar – THE DREAM lives on for Ireland’s young guns after they survived a penalty shootout marathon against Canada in the most clinical, nerve-shredding atmosphere imaginable at the Under-17 World Cup in Qatar.
In a match that ended 1-1 after 90 minutes, the Boys in Green triumphed in a brutal, 10-round spot-kick duel, winning 9-8 to book their place in the Round of 16.
The drama unfolded far from the raucous, muddy pitches of home, on the immaculate turf of Aspire Zone, Pitch 4, in Doha.
This isn’t a historic stadium; it’s one of eight identical, high-tech pitches nestled within the sprawling Qatari sports complex built to host football’s future.
Under the harsh floodlights of the Aspire Zone—a clinical, air-conditioned football factory in the desert—these teenage heroes delivered pure, unadulterated passion that money can’t buy.
Ireland took the lead in the 65th minute through Michael Noonan, sending the small but noisy travelling support into ecstasy.
It looked like victory was sealed until Canada’s Sergei Kozlovskiy smashed home an equalizer just five minutes from time, dragging the contest straight to penalties, thanks to the tournament’s no-extra-time rules.
And what a shootout it was.
The tension was suffocating on the perfectly manicured Pitch 4 as player after player stepped up in the sudden death rounds.
But the real hero under the desert sky was goalkeeper Alex Noonan.
The stopper made a crucial save right at the start before repeating the heroics in the decisive 10th round, diving low to deny Canadian defender Elijah Roche and sparking wild celebrations.
The victory means Ireland march on to the Round of 16.
They might have played their football in the futuristic calm of a Qatari training ground, but their journey has been anything but calm!

