Match officials committed an embarrassing error when they mistakenly played the UK national anthem for the Republic of Ireland Women’s Under-19 team.
On Tuesday, the side played their European Championship qualifier against Sweden in Albena.
The young Irish squad stood bewildered on the pitch as “God Save the King” rang out from the stadium speakers, rather than their national anthem, “Amhrán na bhFiann”.
The blunder left Dave Connell’s players visibly confused, with footage showing them turning to one another in confusion as they recognised the wrong anthem was being played before their crucial qualifying fixture.
When the organisers failed to correct their mistake, the Irish players and coaching staff took matters into their own hands.
Video footage captured the moment the squad began singing their national anthem themselves, their voices filling the stadium without any musical backing.
Spectators responded angrily to the error, with jeering and shouting breaking out in the stands as they expressed their displeasure at hearing the British anthem played for an Irish team.
The young Irish squad stood bewildered on the pitch as ‘God Save the King’ rang out from the stadium speakers
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UEFA
The mix-up with the anthem was an unlucky beginning for the Irish team, who were easily beaten once the match began.
Sweden took control early, with Ella Lundin opening the scoring after just four minutes before adding a second goal at the half-hour mark.
Katie Lawlee offered Ireland hope by reducing the deficit in the 73rd minute, but Agnes Ekberg’s late strike secured a 3-1 victory for the Swedes.
The result marked a disappointing beginning to Ireland’s three-match qualifying campaign, compounding the pre-match embarrassment with a heavy loss on the pitch.
The side was easily beaten once the match began
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REPUBLIC OF IRELAND
The Republic of Ireland’s Women’s U19 side will aim to recover from this setback when they continue their European Championship qualifying campaign with matches against Poland on Saturday and Bulgaria on Tuesday.
The team will be hoping match organisers have secured the correct recording of “Amhrán na bhFiann” for their remaining fixtures in the qualifying window.
This incident echoed a similar controversy at the 2022 Africa Cup of Nations, where Mauritanian players faced anthem mix-ups on two occasions, including having to sing without accompaniment after technical difficulties.
For the men’s national team, the Republic of Ireland has not yet qualified for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
They have secured a play-off spot by finishing second in their qualifying group behind Portugal.
They will face the Czech Republic in a one-legged semi-final away on March 26, 2026.
















