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30th August 2023
09:36am BST

Photo by Stephen McCarthy/Sportsfile[/caption]
Beginning at 4.00, the Abbotstown meeting stretched into darkness as a 'detailed report' of the entire World Cup campaign, complied by the players, Pauw and her management team, was discussed.
“On behalf of the Football Association of Ireland, we would like to thank Vera for her hard work and commitment over the past four years and wish her well for the future,” said Jonathan Hill, the FAI chief executive in a statement.
“In particular, I wish to acknowledge the role she played in leading Ireland to the Fifa Women’s World Cup 2023 where our women’s team made history and inspired a nation,” he added.
“The future is bright for women and girls’ football and our focus now is building upon the work done by Vera and the historic achievements of our women’s team, which we see as a platform to support the next phase of the journey for the team, and more broadly the development of women and girls’ football in this country.”
Those off-field issues will certainly have played a huge part in the decision. Things started to become cloudy regarding Pauw when an Athletic article was published earlier this year about her season coaching Houston Dash in 2018.Seven anonymous sources made allegations of bullying against Pauw and, in a tense press conference before Ireland jetted to Australia, team captain Katie McCabe said that the sideshow had become a "real negative distraction".
Pauw went onto clash with her captain in their final group game against Nigeria over substitutions. McCabe called for a change in tactics during that game and Pauw refused. "She’s not the coach," said the Dutch woman afterwards. McCabe subsequently tweeted out a zipped mouth emoji. https://twitter.com/Katie_McCabe11/status/1686009935409074176 The Irish manager danced on the stage at the team's homecoming but at that time you could sense it, and so it proved true, it was her final dance.