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6th June 2018
08:20pm BST

"From my point of view, he would have helped us go further in the tournament," Duff said on Wednesday, as RTE launched their coverage of the 2018 World Cup.
“You could argue he was the best midfielder in the world at the time. (He was) a massive influence in the dressing room. But again, ‘what ifs,’ who knows? The Spain team weren’t one of the great teams, we dominated them, went out on penalties. Looking at it from another point of view, Roy dominates dressing rooms. People were in fear of Roy - not me, not Robbie, he looked after us, we were young, we were fearless. But even at Man United, people were in fear of him, maybe in a way, when he left, it let lads breathe. "So, we’ll never know. Yeah, (he was) unbelievable, he could have driven us on to the final, but also other players that played well, might not have played as well because Roy was barking down their neck for 90 minutes.”However, as Duff said, one can never know for sure how the team would have performed if Keane had remained.
"It’s all ‘what ifs’. It’s all people talk about is Saipan and Roy. If you’re selling a book, you have to do a chapter on that."Keane returned to the Ireland team in 2004 under Brian Kerr, McCarthy's successor, and has been the team's assistant manager since 2013, working with Martin O'Neill.
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