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'A beautiful occasion' - Diane Caldwell savours her century

Diane Caldwell poses with members of her hometown club Balbriggan FC
Diane Caldwell poses with members of her hometown club Balbriggan FC

Diane Caldwell has been around long enough to know that in football, you're only as good as your last game.

But after notching her 100th Republic of Ireland cap in Friday's 5-1 defeat of Albania, the 35-year-old allowed herself a few moments of reflection.

She becomes the seventh centurion for the Girls in Green, following Emma Byrne (134), Áine O'Gorman (119), Niamh Fahey (111), Louise Quinn (110), Denise O'Sullivan (107) and Ciara Grant (105) into the record books.

The concession of a soft Albanian goal irritated the veteran, who was given the captain's armband for the occasion. Overall though, this was a good night at the office as Caldwell took to the field flanked by her niece and nephew, with players from her hometown club Balbriggan FC dotted around the touchline as ball kids.

"It's so special to join that prestigious club," said Caldwell.

"It was a lovely gesture by Katie to give me the armband. Luckily it was a home game as well because I was talking to the girls and for a lot of them, their 100th cap fell on an away game.

"That was extra special to be at home in Tallaght in front of all of our fans, and obviously my family were there. I don't know if you noticed but my niece and nephew came out with me as well. It was a beautiful occasion.

"It's overwhelming but uplifting at the same time. You've been there through the whole journey, at the development of the women's game as a whole. It's something that I'm really proud of, what this team has achieved."

Diane Caldwell with her nephew Hakeem Abdou Bacar (L) and niece Farrah Abdou Bacar

Caldwell has been a crucial presence on and off the pitch during her lengthy international career.

In September she delievered a scathing assessment of Vera Pauw's time in charge, claiming the team's achievements were "in spite" of the manager and criticising her overall approach to the job.

It was a brutally honest critique that split public opinion, but Caldwell has always had a thick skin when it comes to calling out anything she perceives to be below standard.

Now, she's part of an Ireland team that are enjoying themselves in an admittedly weak Nations League group. Twelve goals in three games highlights a more expansive approach.

"It's definitely a different brand of football, you can see we're a lot more progressive and front-footed, a lot higher up the pitch, a few positional changes as well," Caldwell said.

"I know a lot of people will say, 'aw you're playing against lesser opponents', but I think generally going back on our results, we've struggled against teams like that, to really dominate and impose our style of play on them.

"I think we've jumped up a level if you look on those last three games. The building blocks are there and hopefully we can keep improving and working on that new style of play."

There's little time for Caldwell to truly bask in her achievement as Ireland prepare to fly out to Albania for Tuesday's return fixture.

However the centre-half did take a moment to pay tribute to her team-mates.

"There's not another team that I'd prefer to go out and battle with," she stressed.

"They're just a great bunch of girls and they always have been throughout the years.

"In defence, we obviously have a lot of experience there but it's great to watch those [younger] girls embrace one-on-one situations, be skillful, show their style of play and us oldies at the back keep everything nice and clean and tidy! It's great to let them just do their thing."

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