Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
Sport
Robert Hynes

Roy Keane returned home from World Cup in Qatar as people were 'getting on his nerves'

Roy Keane jetted home from the World Cup in Qatar as people were starting to 'get on his nerves'.

The Manchester United legend, who is working at the tournament as a pundit for ITV, returned home to his English home for a few days before flying back to Qatar.

Keane has provided viewers with plenty of entertainment during the tournament so far and will be back on TV screens this Saturday as England face France in a quarter-final clash.

READ MORE: Roy Keane has 'embarrassing' bank card moment at World Cup in Qatar

READ MORE: 74% of Irish punters backing France to dump England out of the Qatar World Cup

But the former Ireland captain has revealed he needed a break from the desert state and jetted back home to spend time at his house in Manchester.

He explained: "I had a break. I needed a break. My tolerance levels [were starting to go]. People get on my nerves."

When asked who was getting on his nerves, Keane replied "fellow pundits", but stressed Gary Neville wasn't one of them.

Keane has become involved in a back-and-forth argument with Brazil over their dancing celebrations in their 4-1 win over South Korea.

Speaking on ITV on Monday night, Keane said: “I don’t mind the first kind of little jig – whatever they’re doing – but they’re still doing it after that, and then the manager getting involved with it.

“I’m not happy with it, I don’t think it’s very good at all.”

Brazil boss Tite hit back at Keane over the comments ahead of his side's quarter-final clash with Croatia, saying: “I am very sorry but I will not make comment on those who do not know Brazilian history or Brazilian culture, the way each and every one of us is.

“To those, I leave that noise aside. I want my connection to be to my job, to the people who I relate to, to those who relate to my work. They know how much I respect the Brazilian history.

“Those are the ones I give my heart to. I respect the culture.

“Who knows how many more kids will dance, because that is what is in the culture when a goal is scored.

“It is not being disrespectful to anyone else, that is how we do things, that is us. This may also help the education of young kids back in school and we will continue doing things in our manner.”

But Keane has refused to back down on the comments and reiterated that he feels the celebrations were over the top and Brazil shouldn't have danced the way they did.

(AFP via Getty Images)

When asked by Micah Richards in a Sky Bet World Cup video if he thought Brazil were disrespectful, Keane replied: "100%. I love watching Brazil, I love what they stand for, you think of the World Cup, you think of Brazil. I watched them in 1982 and loved everything about them.

"I love watching them because they're brilliant at football, not when they start dancing ten minutes after a goal's gone in or their manager starts dancing. Do you think it's okay? Really?

"You talk about the game, you talk about respect, respecting your teammates, respecting the opposition. A manager done a dance on the sideline. Are you telling me it's okay?

"Every country's got a culture. Why do you think it's okay for a manager to dance? I've never seen a manager from Brazil dancing ever.

"I love what the Brazilians do, love watching them, the football [they played] in the first half was fantastic but that's my opinion. I'm entitled to it. If you think it's okay then that's fine. You're obviously wrong. I don't get it.

"He's got an opposition manager ten yards from him and you have to watch that. The game is about respect as well."

READ NEXT:

Get the latest sports headlines straight to your inbox by signing up for free email alerts

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.