
Sojourn Down Under rekindled Erin Healy's love for the game
Republic of Ireland recruit Erin Healy says the fun she had during her time in the the A-League in Australia brought about a renewed love for the game.
Last week, the 24-year-old San Diego-born attacker was called up by Carla Ward ahead of the Nations League encounters against Turkey and Slovenia. Healy qualifies through her Clones-born grandfather Hugh McGuire, and revealed that it was a long-held ambition for her to wear the green of Ireland.
Speaking to the the press from the Irish squad's base in Turkey, she said: "With my grandfather coming to the USA from Ireland, the Irish heritage has always been part of who I am. When I was in college, my coach enquired as to whether any of us had dual citizenship.
"I asked my mom and she was already collecting documents. I got my citizenship (last September) and ever since then it has been my goal to play for this team.
"It was an unreal experience and it was something I'd been working hard for, really hard for and it is super exciting to be here. I've already been welcomed by the coaching staff. It's a great group of people and hopefully I'll get some playing time. The team are definitely climbing, are making big strides, and I'm delighted to be part of that .
"It's something that would have made my grandfather proud."
Healy's arrival in Ireland comes on the back of an impressive season with Adelaide United in the Ninja A-League, where she scored eight goals and was named the team's player of the year. There was also a stint in Portugal with Club de Albergaria.
The Irish boss sees Healy as a potential replacement for the injured Leanne Ward, speaking highly of the player at last week's squad announcement.
"She is Australia based but soon to be European based this summer and that will help for sure. She is someone we watched quite a lot," Ward said.
"If you have a look at her, she can score goals and link the play. Importantly, she has got a lot of pace and somebody we have been excited about."
In assessing her own worth on the pitch, Healy admitted that she's somewhat enigmatic, when saying: "I like to be involved in a lot of the play, I like to be creative but I'm hard to read in how I play. I like to give a defender a lot to defend against, so that's what you can expect of me."
The latest addition to the Irish squad has certainly gained much experience abroad and as to her future plans, she was somewhat non-committal.
"We are having a few conversations but I'm focusing on this camp first". Though when pushed, Healy did say that the WSL would be "the area I'd be most interested in".
Of course, there was a period when Healy was ready to walk away from the game after graduating from college with an accounting degree.
Recalling the that time, she said: "I took an internship during my college years and I enjoyed the corporate world. I was scared that if you don't get your foot in there at the beginning it might be harder down the road but I also knew I wasn't done with soccer and I had more to give."
Those stints in Portugal and Australia underlined that that she did indeed have more to give.
"I went to the Portuguese league to see if I wanted to continue with soccer. I realised it was part of who I am and I wanted to keep it going. The Portuguese league showed that I had more potential, that I could play in different environments, and perform in those environments.
"I wanted to give it one more try and see what comes of it. I found the fun again, I fell back in love with it.
"Going to Australia was a big leap but I'm comfortable away from home even though I knew I'd be home sick a little bit. I met amazing people and they became my family, a family away from family.
"I think I play my best when I'm having fun. In Australia I had fun every second."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Examiner
37 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
Lee Carsley leads England to defence of Euro U21 crown
European U21 Championship final: England 3 Germany 2 (AET) Whatever Lee Carsley goes on to achieve in his managerial career, this will be very hard to beat. With England's Under-21s having been pegged back by Germany after racing into a 2-0 lead after goals for Harvey Elliott and Omari Hutchinson, those of a negative disposition were probably thinking back to the 1970 World Cup when Sir Alf Ramsey's reigning champions were eliminated after extra time in the same scenario. But with Thomas Tuchel watching on from the stands after dashing across the Atlantic to be here, Carsley – who wasn't even born back then – clearly had no such thoughts. Instead, he boldly decided to gamble by taking off Elliott and the captain James McAtee and was rewarded by substitute Jonathan Rowe scoring with almost his first touch. It means that England have followed in the footsteps of Dave Sexton's sides more than 40 years ago by winning successive European titles and their fourth in total. On this evidence, the future looks very bright indeed. The England manager was calmness personified before kick-off as he cracked jokes with his assistant Ashley Cole and he had the luxury of being able to name an unchanged side from the semi-final victory over the Netherlands. The momentum gained after a much-improved performance in the second half of their final group stage game against a weakened Germany team helped propel an inexperienced group of players past pre-tournament favourites Spain in the last eight. But with their opponents at full strength this time, the threat posed by 6ft 6in striker Nick Woltemade, who began the game as the tournament's top scorer with six goals in only four appearances, seemed obvious. Such was the interest in this game that Tuchel had flown more than 5,000 miles from the Club World Cup in the United States to be in attendance, while the Germany manager, Julian Nagelsmann cut short his holiday in Majorca. There was no sign of any nerves as England were quick to find their rhythm. Elliott started the move down the right flank that ended up with Hutchinson forcing Noah Atubolu into a save. But Nnamdi Collins made a hash of the clearance and the Liverpool forward was able to steady himself before picking his spot with great precision to score his fifth of the competition. Charlie Cresswell – who is the other remaining member from 2023 – was inches away from doubling the lead when James McAtee fired across the face of goal. Then it was Jay Stansfield's turn following another lightning break from Elliott but the Birmingham striker decided against throwing himself at another McAtee pass with the goal gaping. The Manchester City midfielder finally registered an assist when Germany were caught out again on the break and Hutchinson finished with aplomb, celebrating with an acrobatic flip. The usually understated Carsley could barely contain his delight on the touchline. A flowing move began by the outstanding Elliot Anderson's clever backheel almost resulted in a brilliant team goal but Stansfield could only drag his shot wide. With Woltemade having to drop increasingly deeper, Germany seemed to have no answer. Even when goalkeeper James Beadle almost gifted them a goal when he briefly lost possession, England were still able to go straight up the other end and create another chance with McAtee's shot saved by Atubolu. But the loss of the limping Alex Scott, replaced by Liverpool's Tyler Morton just before half-time, was a blow and that was compounded when Nelson Weiper pulled one back by heading home Paul Nebel's cross in injury time. England did not seem to be ruffled by conceding. McAtee was unlucky to see his effort drift just wide after a magnificent dummy left his marker for dead at the start of the second half. But Germany looked so much more threatening when they made it into the final third and Beadle did well not to parry Nebel's cross into the path of the waiting Woltemade, who is set to join Bayern Munich after this tournament. There was to be no such reprieve when Nebel – who qualifies to play for the Republic of Ireland through his grandmother – saw his curling shot deflect off Stansfield and loop over Beadle's despairing dive to equalise. Carsley immediately sacrificed Stansfield for Brooke Norton-Cuffy, with Elliott brought into a more central role. Suddenly the game was on a knife edge as Norton-Cuffy could only direct his shot straight at Atubolu after being set up by Hutchinson. There were hearts in mouths on the England bench when Germany struck the crossbar in injury time but they made it to extra time. Carsley rolled the dice by taking off the exhausted McAtee and Elliott and it immediately paid dividends as Rowe's deft header from Morton's cross restored England's lead. 'We have to dig in,' said Carsley as he gathered his players together in a huddle at the change of ends. 'This is our time now.' He could not contain his delight at the full time whistle after another late scare when Germany hit the bar again. But Carsley and England would not be denied their place in the history books. Guardian

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
Another 4x100m relay record helps Ireland into fifth place at European Team Championships
IRELAND IS IN fifth place at the European Team Championships Division 2 after a raft of strong performances in Maribor, Slovenia. Ireland has a total of 192 points heading into Day 2, which puts them in contention to reach a top-three spot and promotion to Division 1. The bottom three teams will be relegated. For the second weekend in a row, the men's 4x100m relay team have broken the national record. After breaking the 25-year-old record in Switzerland last weekend, Michael Farrelly, Sean Aigboboh, Marcus Lawler and Israel Olatunde clocked 38.88 to beat the 38.92 they ran last week. That time was enough to see the team win their heat and finish second overall. It also gave Ireland 15 points to help them climb up the leaderboard. Day 1 ✅ | Team Ireland sitting strong in 5th 🇮🇪 After 20 events, Ireland holds 5th place on 192 points heading into Day 2 of the European Team Championships Division 2 in Maribor 🇸🇮 Results from the last events of the day⤵️ 🔹Brian Fay 2nd place Men's 5000m: 15 pts 🔹Ava… — Athletics Ireland (@irishathletics) June 28, 2025 'Back to back records, it's fantastic,' a delighted Farrelly said after. 'The goal here was to run our fastest or second-fastest. We just ran our fastest again. To be on a team with these lads is an honour.' Aigboboh was a sub last week and came in to replace the injured Bori Akinola. 'To be on the track here today and play a part is great. It's an amazing feeling. A great senior debut.' Commenting on Ireland's fifth-place position, relay team captain Lawler said: 'We're going well and we're gonna go stronger again tomorrow. There's a lot of positive energy so we'll keep it up.' 🗣️"That record hadn't be broken for 25 years, and we've gone and done it back to back and to be part of something huge like this, it's just great." The Men's 4x100m team reflect on their National record performance at today's European Team Championships💚#IrishAthletics… — Athletics Ireland (@irishathletics) June 28, 2025 Sharlene Mawdsley and Jack Raftery also produced vital times over 400m. Advertisement Raftery became just the second Irish man to break 45 seconds after running clocking 44.98 to finish fourth in the event, contributing 13 points to Ireland's cause. 'I don't know if I have words for it,' a breathless Raftery said. 'I was lucky enough to be in a fantastic race. It's the best field I've ever been part of. 'I can't believe that. I felt great coming down the home straight. I'm really enjoying my running, I'm enjoying the process. I don't think it's gonna hit me for a couple of hours. I've no idea how I'm going to process this.' 🗣️ 'I don't know if I have words for it…I can't believe it. Oh my god I'm delighted.' An elated Jack Raftery chats to us after clocking 44.98 at the European Team Championships to move second on the Irish all-time list 🤯#IrishAthletics #Maribor2025 #ETCH2025 — Athletics Ireland (@irishathletics) June 28, 2025 Mawdsley ran season's best of 50.93 to take third in the women's race which amounted to 14 points. 'Honestly, I don't know how I made it around,' Mawdsley said. 'A season's best is great, it's a shame I didn't come first, I would have loved the top points but it probably would have taken a PB [personal best] to do that today. 'Today was about getting out there and doing my family proud.' 🗣️ 'A season's best is great…I'm looking forward to cheering on the rest of the team now.' Hear from Sharlene Mawdsley after she clocked a season's best of 50.93 to finish third in the Women's 400m at the European Team Championships 🤩#IrishAthletics #Maribor2025 #ETCH2025 — Athletics Ireland (@irishathletics) June 28, 2025 Meanwhile, Brian Fay earned 15 points after clinching second place in the men's 5,000m in a time of 13:56.07 behind Belgium's Issac Kimeli who won in 13:55.70. Team Ireland sits in 13th place (33 pts) after the opening six events at the European Team Championships in Maribor 🇸🇮 Strong efforts across the board as our athletes get the campaign underway: 🔹Sean Mockler 12th place Men's Hammer: 5 pts 🔹Shane Howard 11th place Men's Long… — Athletics Ireland (@irishathletics) June 28, 2025 Elsewhere, Conor Kelly set a new national U20 record of 46.06 in the men's 400m of at the Junioren Gala in Mannheim. This improves on his previous record of 46.18, which he set last month at the IFAM Outdoor.

The Journal
an hour ago
- The Journal
Dessie Farrell steps down as Dublin manager after elimination from All-Ireland
The 42 DESSIE FARRELL HAS announced that he is stepping down as manager of the Dublin footballers. Farrell confirmed the news to GAA+ following his side's All-Ireland SFC quarter-final defeat to Tyrone in Croke Park. It's the second second successive season that Dublin have exited the championship at the quarter-final stage. Advertisement He explained that he informed the players in the dressing room after the game and had already told the county board at the start of the year that this would be his last season in charge. BREAKING DESSIE FARRELL STEPS DOWN🚨 Dessie Farrell has just announced he is stepping down as Dublin Manager after today's Quarter-Final defeat to Tyrone. ❌ — GAA+ (@GAAPlusOfficial) June 28, 2025 It's the first time since their Sam Maguire winning season of 2021 that Tyrone have reached the semi-finals. Malachy O'Rourke's team timed their scoring run perfectly to settle a grinding contest pulling clear to win by seven in the end after a late burst of points. Written by Sinead Farrell and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here .