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13th September 2017
09:46am BST

Maguire needs to prove he can find the net in England to stand any chance of forcing his way into the reckoning with Martin O'Neill. The Ireland boss recognises his talent and selected him for a wider squad ahead of the Georgia and Serbia games but cut him adift as the games neared.
O'Neill's logic was that it may be too much to ask a young forward to immediately come into a senior squad and show no fear on the international stage. Anyone that knows Maguire will tell you that he would relish such a challenge and back himself to make the difference.
Solid performances garner praise but goals get headlines and goals get attention. Two in two games - against Barnsley and Cardiff - have certainly seen to that.
https://twitter.com/james_hall_96/status/907714567249305600
https://twitter.com/dalewetter/status/907714725810774016
https://twitter.com/JamieTorpey/status/907703625694167040
https://twitter.com/jonny_preston/status/907717413973708800
Maguire has settled in well but there are four games in front of him before O'Neill names his squad for the Moldova and Wales double-header. The forward has either bolted too soon or, if he backs himself, will see this as only the start.
Birmingham, Millwall, Hull and Sunderland. They are the coming objectives.
He is close but, on suspects, he will need to do more yet to convince O'Neill he can lead the Irish line.
We have all been guilty of getting ahead of ourselves with promising Irish players over the years - Keith O'Neill, Stephen McPhail and Jack Byrne, to name three - but it is hard to sit on one's hands when watching Maguire in full flow.Explore more on these topics: