
‘No guarantees' – Stephen Kenny warns St Pat's fans ahead of Europa Conference League qualifiers
Kenny had his side's
Advertisement
2
Kenny's side currently sit sixth in the table with two more games played than teams around them
2
St Pat's narrowly missed out on Conference League qualification last season, losing to İstanbul Başakşehir in the play-off round
The Lithuanian outfit will be in Richmond Park on Thursday facing a Saints team that has not won for six matches,
Last year, European football sparked an upturn in their form but boss Kenny is not assuming the same thing will happen again.
The Inchicore supremo, 53, said: 'There's no guarantees just because you did it before. We've got to fight for our lives.
'We definitely have to do that. And we've got to give everything of ourselves to get the victory that we need in Europe. And that's what we must strive to do.
Advertisement
Read more on Irish football
'And we have to come back in the league, our last two games are against Waterford and Sligo in the third phase.
"We must compete in those games as well. They're very important games for us as well. We've got to get up levels.'
The ex-Ireland boss did highlight how he has had to make do without key players for long periods of time this season to explain in part why Pat's lie sixth, 17 points behind Shamrock Rovers, when they were many people's title favourites.
He said: 'Listen, there are no excuses, everyone has their issues but the rhythm of the forwards . . . Aidan Keena started off like a house on fire. He got player of the month in the league, but he did a T-junction (hamstring) and was out for seven weeks with that.
Advertisement
Most read in Football
'And we fired him in early enough then. But Mason Melia had
'And then had some osteopubis, which he missed three-and-a-half weeks with, and then we put him back in. So we haven't been just getting that rhythm for the two main forwards, although they both scored six each and that's up there.
League of Ireland mascots compete in charity race in Naas
'Then the creative players behind, Romal Palmer has been out for the whole season, more or less. And Chris Forrester was out for eight weeks.
'He came back, put himself in for a game against Waterford, but he wasn't quite right and got re-injured. So overall, he was sort of eight weeks with that little cameo in between.
Advertisement
'Some people are incredible, like Zach Elbouzedi, or somebody like that. But different players find it harder to get to the level then when they come back.
'Players like Aidan and Chris, they can't just come back after those periods, two months out and just turn it on again. It can be a challenge.
'But excuses are excuses. Putting the ball in the back of the net, you've got to do that regardless.
'And we've enough good players and we just hit a barren period. Sometimes that's difficult to actually explain.
Advertisement
'But we just have to fight hard, dig in and give ourselves every chance on Thursday.'
DUBLIN HISTORY
Hegelmann manager Andrius Skerla was part of the Zalgiris side which won in Inchicore and knocked St Pat's out of the Europa League in 2013.
He had previously played for Dunfermline in Scotland but that was before Kenny's stint in charge there.
Kenny said: 'He was very fondly remembered, he was a good player, yeah. But our paths never crossed.'
Advertisement
Hegelmann lie second in Lithuania's A Lyga, six points behind leaders Kauno Zalgiris, with eight matches left to play. And wary Kenny is expecting a tough test in three days' time.
He said: 'They're mid-season, they've players of different nationalities and they've done well. They play on an Astro Turf pitch, it's a small ground and we have to adapt to that.
'But first of all is a home game here and we have to make sure that we're ready. Lithuanian teams will always be very competitive, I feel. So we have to put in a strong performance on Thursday night.'
Hashtags

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


Irish Examiner
3 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Kieran Shannon: History will be on Cork's side in All-Ireland final
Well, this wasn't the trilogy or repeat final we were expecting, was it? After Cork cantered past Tipperary back in early but sunny April to win their first league title in 27 long years, the consensus was that Limerick and Clare would accompany them out of Munster. Tipp, for all their progress and effort during the group stage of the league, were hardly going to leapfrog the teams that had won both the league and All-Ireland in 2023 and 2024 and the odds-on favourites to complete a similar double in 2025. It was still too soon in Tipp's development, with an admirably frank Richie Hogan going so far as to say on Off The Ball that 'the quality of player is just not there for them' and that Ronan Maher was probably the only of them that would make the Cork starting 15. This is exclusive subscriber content. Already a subscriber? Sign in Take us with you this summer. Annual €130€65 Best value Monthly €12€6 / month


Irish Examiner
3 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Fogarty Forum: Hurling semi-final's phantom point a bad case of group-think
There was no cup on offer last Sunday but if possession is indeed nine-tenths of the law, Tipperary were letting it be known early Monday afternoon that they were keeping hold of their All-Ireland final spot. At 2.42pm, notification of their final media event that takes place on Tuesday afternoon didn't come through their usual communication channel but Croke Park. The GAA's dissemination of it cemented the perception at least that Tipperary's presence in the July 20 game against Cork was secure. This is exclusive subscriber content. Already a subscriber? Sign in Take us with you this summer. Annual €130€65 Best value Monthly €12€6 / month


RTÉ News
5 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Former Dublin captain Seán Doherty dies
Seán Doherty, who captained Dublin to All-Ireland SFC glory in 1974, has died. Born in Wicklow in 1946, Doherty played his club football with Ballyboden Wanderers, Ballyboden St Enda's, and St Anne's, and led Wanderers to a Dublin Junior Football Championship in 1968. However, the classy full-back will be best remembered in football circles for ending an 11-year drought in the capital when hoisting Sam Maguire aloft after the Metropolitans defeated Galway on a 0-14 to 1-06 scoreline at Croke Park in 1974. An All-Star that same year, Doherty won five Leinster titles and two National Football Leagues as a player and went on to land further All-Ireland SFC titles with Dublin in 1976 and 1977. Dublin's loss to Kerry in the 1978 final was his final appearance in sky blue, although he remained inextricably linked to football in the county and served as a joint-manager of the senior team in 1989 alongside Gerry McCaul and Tony Hempenstall.