By Our Man in Prague
THE WORLD CUP dream was within touching distance, a shimmering oasis in the middle of Prague, before it was cruelly snatched away in a night of pure, unadulterated drama at the Fortuna Arena.
For 86 minutes, Ireland were halfway to the United States. Instead, they leave the Czech capital with nothing but “what ifs” after a 2-2 thriller ended in a 4-3 penalty shootout defeat.
Parrott’s Purple Patch
The “Boys in Green” exploded out of the blocks like a team possessed. Troy Parrott, the man with the Midas touch, continued his sensational international scoring streak. In the 19th minute, after a lengthy VAR review for a foul on skipper Nathan Collins, Parrott kept his cool to smash home from the spot.
Just four minutes later, the travelling Irish fans were in dreamland. A Dara O’Shea header from a corner caused chaos, bouncing off the woodwork and then in off a disoriented Matej Kovar for a bizarre own goal. Ireland were 2-0 up and cruising.
Manning’s Moment of Madness
But the Czechs, led by the towering Ladislav Krejci, refused to fold. The comeback began when Ryan Manning suffered a catastrophic brain-fade, tugging Krejci’s shirt in the box with the ball heading out of play. Patrik Schick didn’t miss, hammering the penalty home to make it 2-1 before the break.
Ireland dug in during a bruising second half, with Jayson Molumby rattling the post and Kovar making a world-class save to deny another Parrott header. However, the pressure eventually told. In the 86th minute, Krejci rose highest at a corner to thunder a header past Caoimhin Kelleher, sending the game into a goalless, agonizing extra time.
The 12-Yard Lottery
The shootout was a microcosm of the match—moments of brilliance followed by crushing despair. Kelleher, Ireland’s penalty specialist, gave them the advantage by saving from Mojmir Chytil.
But the night belonged to Kovar. The Czech keeper, who had earlier cost his team a goal, turned hero by diving low to deny both Finn Azaz and Alan Browne. Jan Kliment stepped up to blast the final spot-kick home, sparking scenes of jubilation in Prague and leaving the Irish stars slumped on the turf in tears.
Heimir Hallgrimsson’s men “punched above their weight,” but for a generation of Irish fans, the wait for a World Cup return since 2002 goes on.
Czechia 2-2 Ireland (4-3 on pens)
Czechia: Schick 27′ (P), Krejci 86′
Ireland: Parrott 19′ (P), Kovar 23′ (OG)


