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Published 08:55 30 Jun 2015 BST
Updated 09:18 30 Jun 2015 BST

"Fawlty Towers has players up in arms" - Irish Independent.
But it just jars a little when the FAI seems so loath to treat us with even a remote hint of repsect," a "high profile" member of the Irish team told Vincent Hogan. The players weren't happy with their living conditions in Italy. There are no facilities here to help us avoid boredom. You know we'd kill for a board-game like monopoly." Simpler times.At least the lads got a few hours out of their shacks to meet the Pope. David Kelly got a good spot.
"I am confident we can shock Italy," Packie Bonner tells the Irish Press newspaper. "Today is the most important football match I will play in my life and I want to enjoy every minute of it. I hope the nation will be celebrating with me tonight."
"A month of Italia '90 is taking its toll on Jack's Army." - Irish Independent.
A month of following the team around Italy has left the Irish fans physically, mentally and financially exhausted.
Tony Gilroy, from Sutton in Dublin told the Independent.
"I know six people out in Italy at the moment who have been sacked from their jobs because they didn't come back from the World Cup. They contacted their employers in Dublin asking for a few more days' holidays and they were told that if they didn't come home they have to face being sacked."Meanwhile, Leonard FitzGerald from Cork told the newspaper the trip cost him and his wife "between £4,500 and £5,000."
"I would gladly have gone home after the penalty shoot-out against Romania," FitzGerald said, "but unfortunately we couldn't get a flight."He didn't have much longer to wait.
"Ireland lost with honour in the World Cup quarter-final against Italy in Rome last night," Eamon Dunphy wrote in The Sunday Independent.
"Salvatori Schillaci scored the goal that brought our glorious crusade to an end. But long before that wicked 38th minute Ireland's World Cup campaign ceased to be about football." "Ireland have brought much to this tournament... We are coming home today. We will be remembered here. And remember this as a golden time. We could hardly have asked for more.

"We knew before the game that Ireland was a good side," goalkeeper Zenga said, "and they confirmed it. Ireland is a team made up of true professionals who play excellent soccer, right to the last whistle. Ireland, too, has terrific fans, almost as good as our own."
"Crowds as big as those which welcomed the Pope to Ireland and who witnessed the funeral of Parnell nearly 100 years ago, lined the streets and roads from the airport to the city centre throughout the evening." - Irish Press.
Most of the cabinet were present at College Green for the official welcoming function, but it was the ordinary people who dictated the pace and mood of the unique festival. "You were marvellous - the best supporters in the world," Jack told the crowds repeatedly.However, the Irish Press weren't convinced 500,000 people lining the streets of Dublin was sufficient to show thanks to Ireland's manager.
"Dublin has never seen anything like it. It was the most emotional outpouring in the long and often barren history of Irish sport" - Irish Independent. "If Ireland had actually won the World Cup, it is hard to imagine a more joyous, emotional or exhilarating reception as men, women, and children came out as one to embrace their heroes."
Kevin Moran also spoke to the Independent.
"We knew it would be special but, not for the first time the Irish have surpassed themselves. I can say with some certainty that last night's experience was the most emotional of my sporting life. In the past, I have always liked to separate my Gaelic football memories from those acquired through soccer. But, now, I have to concede - yes - this was the ultimate."Other newspapers got so carried away that they simply wrote headlines where they tried to sum up what everyone was thinking and feeling.




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