Nathan Collins: Ireland prepared to use 'dark arts' to silence Czechia crowd
Nathan Collins believes that if his side can motivate Ireland's 1,000 supporters in the playoff against Czech, "there is a massive chance they can be louder than the home team". Pic:Â Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile
Ireland captain Nathan Collins admits his side are prepared to engage in the dark arts to quieten the dominant Czechia crowd in Thursdayâs World Cup playoff semi-final.
Uefaâs minimum away ticket allocation was afforded by the Czechia FA, meaning just 1,024 fans will officially be among the 19,000 spectators at the Fortuna Arena in Prague.
Their main striker Patrik Schick echoed the declaration of war espoused by new manager Miroslav Koubek last week as the Bayer Leverkusen forward stressed theyâd be up for a âfightâ against Ireland.
Irelandâs assistant boss John OâShea borrowed that theme when stating that the âtanks are loaded for Thursdayâ and powerhouse Collins is adamant his team wonât cower amid whatâs shaping up to be a raucous atmosphere.
"There is always a possibility of the occasion getting to people,â the Brentford man said about tension abounding in the Prague air.
âThat's for us to control; to control the noise in the stadium and how Czechia try to motivate their team. There could be some dark arts in football to calm them down, potentially.
"Every stadium we've played in, we've always heard the Ireland fans. It can work both ways. If we can encourage them, there is a massive chance they can be louder than the home team."
Much of the narrative around the Ireland team is maintaining the verve they developed from beating the top two seeds in their group, Portugal and Hungary, to snaffle second and this playoff route to North America in the summer.
Although a key component of that upturn, central midfielder Josh Cullen, is missing through injury, Collins is certain the deputies, including possibly Corkman Alan Browne, possess the quality to complete the mission.
"We've played games without Josh previously so weâre prepared for this,â he reasoned.
âThereâs a lot of good midfielders who can step in there. I have a lot of faith and belief in the squad that they can do a job.
"I think there is a belief that we can do it, built upon strong motivation and excitement. We all realise we can do something, even if everybody knows weâre not already there.
âIf we can carry what we've done since those games we've a really good chance to do something."
Both nations will be playing for the right to face either Denmark or North Macedonia in the March 31 final, with a World Cup berth up for grabs.
Czechiaâs last World Cup qualification was 2006 and despite them reaching every Euro finals since, the craving to end their wait is palpable in Prague.
Likewise for Ireland. For the last time they graced the World stage in 2002, emerging star at Manchester United OâShea narrowly missed out on the squad.
He won every club honour in the game and experienced two Euro finals but the global showpiece close call against France in 2009 is the one that still grates.
âLovely, hit me where it hurts!" said Heimir HallgrĂmssonâs sidekick when reminded of the one gap on his glittering CV.
âIâve been very fortunate in my career but to have represented Ireland in a World Cup would have been a dream scenario.
âTouch wood, weâre not far away from, in a sense, the next best case for me.âÂ
A young OâShea might have felt that opportunity would arise again but heâll be highlighting to the players the importance of seizing the immediate moment.
âThese are opportunities that you strive for at international level.
âWe want the team, the fans and families to be able to celebrate occasions like they did last November.
âBut that was just in a qualifying campaign. This is the next step for a playoff final, and then what can come from that in the summer.
âTheyâre huge moments, like a cup final now, so donât let those moments pass.âÂ
Meanwhile, Czechia have created a surprise in their homeland by appointing 26-year-old Wolves defender Ladislav KrejÄĂ as new captain, stripping TomĂĄs Soucek permanently of the armband.
The West Ham United midfielder was disciplined by the Czechia FA after his team failed to applaud their fans following the facile 6-0 win over Gibraltar in November.
New manager Miroslav Koubek, in conjunction with general manager, legendary former midfielder Pavel NedvÄd, hinted last week at a new appointment and the big reveal has finally occurred.
âI have a sense of the whole situation in the team,â said former Ballon DâOr winner NedvÄd.
âYou can feel how the team works and who is the natural leader, how everyone approaches it.
âThe decision was quite simple and clear for me.â




