Northern Ireland manager Michael O’Neill looks to pile pressure on Holland

Michael O’Neill wants his Northern Ireland side to pile the pressure on Holland by beating Belarus in Tuesday night’s Euro 2020 qualifier in Borisov.
Northern Ireland captain Steven Davis durings training session at the ABFF Training Centre in MinskNorthern Ireland captain Steven Davis durings training session at the ABFF Training Centre in Minsk
Northern Ireland captain Steven Davis durings training session at the ABFF Training Centre in Minsk

After Saturday’s dramatic come-from-behind win over Estonia in Tallinn, victory for the Green and White would put them on 12 points from four games, nine points clear of Ronald Koeman’s beaten Nations League finalists.

The Dutch may have two games in hand after their adventures in Portugal last week, but with their next qualifier coming away to Germany in September, the yawning gap could weigh heavily on their shoulders.

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“The most important thing for us was to try and not drop points in any of these four games because obviously we have to assume the Netherlands and Germany won’t drop points,” O’Neill said.

“But the nice thing for us is we can put pressure on, in particular, the Netherlands because they have games to play and make up.”

There is no question that facing Estonia and Belarus home and away to open the campaign has helped Northern Ireland, who are looking to win four qualifiers to open a campaign for the first time.

They have not had it all their own way however, and have relied on late Josh Magennis strikes to win both of their last two matches, at home to Belarus in March and then in Tallinn on Saturday night.

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Belarus, in contrast, have played three and lost three - the latest a 2-0 defeat to Germany in Borisov at the weekend.

Igor Kriushenko changed from a 4-3-3 to a 5-3-2 formation for the Germans, and his side at least gave the Group C favourites a testing night - something O’Neill expects himself.

“As Estonia showed the other night, Belarus will look at this game as one they potentially could win,” he said.

“With that in mind, it’ll be an extremely difficult game. They have talented players in their squad, they have players in season as well.”

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Saturday’s match in Tallinn was played in hot and humid conditions which will have been draining on the legs of O’Neill’s players, many of whom had not played for a month prior to the match.

Northern Ireland arrived in Belarus to find similar weather, but with kick-off on Tuesday not until 9.45pm things should have cooled off considerably.

“We come into the game mentally in a good place because we won the last game, our mental tiredness is not the same, so that should be the key factor for us,” he said.

“We look forward to the game and we have everything to gain by trying to go out and get another three points.”

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O’Neill was playing the last time Northern Ireland won a double-header away from home - against Lithuania and Latvia in the summer of 1993 - but a long-awaited repeat appears in reach.

“The carrot is huge for us,” O’Neill said.

“The ability to have 12 points after four games will be a big achievement and put us in a strong position. That’s all the motivation the players need.

“We know how important it is to win all four of our opening games.”

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