Paddy McNair’s call for high intensity from Northern Ireland in Bulgaria test

Paddy McNair is desperate for Northern Ireland to get back to winning ways tomorrow night in their crunch World Cup qualifier against Bulgaria.
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Manager Ian Baraclough is without a victory inside 90 minutes in his 10 games in charge of the side as positive performances go unrewarded, with the winless run increasingly a talking point at the start of a new qualifying campaign.

McNair, 25, admitted he had been spoiled by the success Northern Ireland had enjoyed for much of his international career to date as they went to Euro 2016 barely a year after his debut, and he does not want to settle for less.

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“I was making my third or fourth appearance and we were training at Windsor Park and (Aaron) ‘Hughesy’ turn around to me and said, ‘Look at you coming in at the right time, going to the Euros and a brand new stadium; I went through all the bad years and you’ve come in and got it all!’” McNair said. “I’ve loved my international career so far. Going to a major tournament, we have been a successful team.

“In the last 18 months or two years we haven’t won as many games as we would have liked so hopefully on Wednesday we can get back on a winning run.”

A lack of cutting edge has cost Northern Ireland as they have scored only seven goals during Baraclough’s tenure, too often finding themselves chasing games. Much was rightly made of the strong performance in the second half of Thursday’s 2-0 defeat to Italy, but it only came once Northern Ireland had given themselves so much to do.

“We have to start with high intensity; we can’t start how we did against Italy,” McNair added. “The first goal is massive and I just feel like at home, in the past we’ve started well and not let the opposition play out from the back. If we can do that and put Bulgaria under pressure from the start it will definitely help us win the game.”

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McNair, who started his first international at centre-back on Thursday after previously playing in midfield and at right-back, likes the 3-5-2 formation.

“It’s crucial that the wing-backs do push on,” he said. “The Italy game was a perfect example of that: in the first half we were in a back five and it was too easy for them to go from side to side.

“But in the second half I felt that we pushed up a lot more. (George Saville) was pushing onto their full-back, which got us up the pitch, and I was then going in on a midfielder, and that’s the way to play it.”

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