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12th September 2023
02:35pm BST

6 September 2005; Roy Keane and Clinton Morrison, Republic of Ireland, during squad training. Lansdowne Road, Dublin. Picture credit; David Maher / SPORTSFILE[/caption]
Meanwhile, on SportsJOE's House of Football, as rumours continue to swirl about Stephen Kenny's future as Republic of Ireland manager, Keane was discussed as a potential replacement for Kenny down the line.
Football Pundit Alan Cawley sees potential in the idea and, if nothing else, feels that Keane would certainly entertain the idea.
"Roy has always spoken about going back into management. I don't think he'll go back at club level. Maybe he's shied away from club management because things have gone so well in punditry for him.
"You won't know until you ask him. But I'm sure if someone from the FAI rang him and asked him about managing the national team, I'm sure he would entertain that conversation. 100%.
"I really do think he'd entertain the idea. Whether he'd take it I don't know, but he would definitely have a conversation."
"My only fear, if he was to get it, that it would be like the publicity side of things, that that was why he'd be given the job. He wouldn't want that. He'd want to be given the job on his merits, 'you're the man we see as fit for the job."
Some feel that Keane is too direct to handle a modern dressing room but Cawley reckons that, at this stage, Keane would be clever enough to navigate his way around that worry.
"I think to be fair, his work around Sky, even though the modern game probably infuriates the life out of him, he's just had to adapt to it.
"Being around the likes of Neville and Carragher too. Ultimately, he comes to a conclusion this is the way it is, because he is a clever guy as well."
Morrison, meanwhile, reckons Keane has the perfect blend of knowing when to be serious and when to have a laugh.
"He just tells you how it is. He don't care what it is. He has fun. He can have a laugh and be serious and when you've won what he's won, if he tells you you're not good enough, you're not good enough."
“Clinton Morrison was speaking as one of the judges for Sky Bet’s Real Football Number Ones campaign, looking for the heroes who aren’t always on the pitch, but are constantly making a difference to the beautiful game.”Explore more on these topics: