Ireland are “fighting strongly” to make it to the Euro 2016 finals in France next year despite being consigned to the play-off route after their 2-1 defeat by Poland in Warsaw in their final qualifier, manager Martin O’Neill said.

A 2-2 draw would have allowed the Irish to book their place in the finals behind world champions Germany, but Robert Lewan-dowski scored the winner just before half-time after Grzegorz Krychowiak had fired Poland ahead in the 13th minute.

Ireland had captain John O’Shea sent off late on for a second yellow card and O’Neill insists his men have a fighting chance of making it to France.

“It is disappointing because beating Germany (1-0) gave us a run at it,” the manager said.

“Whoever we play (over two legs in the play-offs), we will have as good a chance as them,” he added.

“Before we played Germany if you had offered me third I would have taken it. But that win gave us the confidence to play Poland.

“We had to go for it in the second half, I actually thought we might have got a second goal, and that would have taken us through.

“Right until the end we were there but we were perhaps lacking that cohesiveness.

“Despite putting a lot of pressure on them it wasn’t to be. But we are still in there, we can still make it. We didn’t make it but we are still fighting strongly,” he added.

The play-off draw takes place on Sunday.

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