THE ARCHIVE
Players
Bad breaks | Bad breaks |
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Just four summers have passed since the then Juventus manager Carlo Ancelotti introduced Ronnie O’Brien for the last 13 minutes of an Intertoto Cup semi-final against the Russian representatives Rostelmash. Making his third cameo appearance in the competition, the 20-year-old Irishman slotted in comfortably alongside Edgar Davids, Alessandro Del Piero et al. A matter of months after Bryan Robson had shown him the door at the Riverside Stadium, while very publicly dismissing his chances of ever making it at the highest level, he was pulling that famous zebra-striped jersey over his head and trousering £3,000 a week. Life was good and the unfortunate Liam Brady comparisons were far too plentiful. Today, O’Brien is back at home in Bray, County Wicklow, recuperating from a broken leg sustained playing for Major League Soccer’s Dallas Burn on May 3. Near the end of his team’s fourth game of the season – a visit to DC United’s RFK Stadium – the right-winger dispossessed Dema Kovalenko. As he hared towards the penalty area, the Ukrainian recovered to launch an airborne two-footed tackle that broke his right tibia so badly surgeons had to insert a metal bar into his leg. Having arrived in America last summer, what would have been O’Brien’s first full season in the league and a chance to earn a contract beyond next October was already over. Since the referee on the night bizarrely didn’t see fit to punish the crime with even a card, MLS later banned Kovalenko for one game and fined him $1,000. For some Burn fans, this sort of leniency prompted them to take action of their own. When DC visited Dallas four weeks later, they held up a sign urging the home players to retaliate first and break Kovalenko’s leg. In a reference to the Ukrainian’s previous involvement in the fracturing of the Burn’s Brandon Pollard’s leg back in 1999, the banner advised that by doing so “the leg you save may be your own”. O’Brien wisely counselled against that kind of retaliation. Well, sort of. From WSC 198 August 2003. What was happening this month On the subject...
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