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22nd December 2021
03:23pm GMT

"You weren't celebrating the loss, or anything like that," says McGrath. "It was the whole competition. That's just the Irish - you don't get all glum and think, 'we were shocking tonight'. "To me it was, 'We were beaten, we were beaten by the better team, but let's still celebrate. This is the World Cup. We got to the last eight of the World Cup. Let's celebrate how far we've come'."Four years after Italy knocked Ireland out of the World Cup, fate would have it that both sides would face each other in their USA 94 opener. The game would take place at Giants Stadium in New Jersey and attracted massive local interest from the Irish and Italian communities. [caption id="attachment_165125" align="aligncenter" width="647"]
Standing beside Roy Keane (back left), Paul McGrath lines out with the Ireland team at USA 94. (Credit: David Maher/SPORTSFILE)[/caption]
"I had said it to Jack about four months before the World Cup. But Jack, Mick Byrne and Charlie O'Leary were all trying to get my left shoulder to work. But it was horrific for me. I was actually doing extra work, every single day, with Mick Byrne. I was going for runs and we were trying to get this thing rolling. "I remember Ronnie Whelan, when we were doing this shoulder rolling [to warm-up] in training, laughing at me. I was saying, 'This isn't funny!' I was really getting worked up about it, as it really was not working properly. "So, I was thrilled when he picked me in the team - Oh my God, I'm in the team!"[caption id="attachment_244991" align="aligncenter" width="1394"]
Paul McGrath tackles Giuseppe Signori. (Credit: David Cannon/ALLSPORT)[/caption]
"Phil Babb saved me on one occasion when he slid in and Denis Irwin did exactly the same. Those kids - and they were only young kids at the time - really put themselves about. And Terry Phelan was another one. He was sprinting up and down the line like nobody's business."There are certain days, McGrath explains, where you just get a sense that history is on your side. June 18th 1994 was one of those days.
"When you were walking out and you see that crowd. The stadium just went up, up into the sky. And I reckon, 80% of it was Irish, if not higher. We all looked around at each other and said - 'Oh my God, this is the one, isn't it? We can't afford to lose.' "And when you say that, the lads know exactly what you mean. The older ones start walking out and say, 'This is the one day we can't afford to lose'. And suddenly you realise that something has to go right for us, because we're not going to lose against this lot'. And that's how it went."[caption id="attachment_244990" align="aligncenter" width="632"]
Franco Baresi pictured at USA 94. (Credit: Getty Images)[/caption]
"There were certain players that I just loved, and some of them knew I loved them as when I was walking out to play, I'd have stars in my eyes looking up at them. "I would never ask for someone's jersey unless someone was close to me at the end of a game, and asked me. I was thinking of asking Franco Baresi for his, as he was someone I admired and I thought I may not see him again. "But I think he was a bit upset that day, so he wasn't hanging around. But that's okay."McGrath is reminded of Roy Keane saying, earlier this year, that he regretted asking Matthias Sammer for his jersey after Ireland beat Germany in a pre-USA 94 friendly. The midfielder had refused Keane's request and walked on by. Keane, looking back, could understand why. "I bet Roy didn't forget that," jokes McGrath. "He would have got him back for that!"
Paul McGrath is an ambassador for Repak’s Team Green. By joining Repak Team Green, not only will you be pledging to recycle more and better, you can also get handy tips on how to do so. It takes just two minutes to join Repak Team Green at repak.ie/teamgreen.
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