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Northern Ireland manager Michael O'Neill will be without key midfield duo Shea Charles and Ali McCann for this month's 2026 World Cup qualifiers against Slovakia and Luxembourg.
Southampton midfielder Charles misses out with a hamstring injury, while McCann fractured his arm in action for Preston North End last month.
Charles' younger brother, Sheffield Wednesday goalkeeper Pierce Charles, is also absent with the shoulder problem that has kept him out of Northern Ireland's past four games.
Oxford United defender Brodie Spencer is another absentee in a squad that sees uncapped Barnsley midfielder Patrick Kelly promoted from the under-21s.
Northern Ireland are third in Group A, three points behind leaders Germany and second-place Slovakia with two games remaining.
They face Slovakia in Kosice on 14 November before concluding their campaign at home to Luxembourg three days later.
Swansea midfielder Ethan Galbraith is in the squad but will be suspended for the first game of the double-header.
Goalkeepers: Bailey Peacock-Farrell, Conor Hazard, Luke Southwood
Defenders: Paddy McNair, Daniel Ballard, Conor Bradley, Ciaron Brown, Trai Hume, Eoin Toal, Ruairi McConville, Terry Devlin, Ryan Johnson
Midfielders: George Saville, Isaac Price, Paul Smyth, Ethan Galbraith, Justin Devenny, Ross McCausland, Brad Lyons, Jamie Donley, Jamie McDonnell, Patrick Kelly
Forwards: Josh Magennis, Dion Charles, Callum Marshall, Jamie Reid
While the likes of Conor Bradley and Isaac Price may garner more headlines, Shea Charles and Ali McCann have become the fulcrum around which O'Neill has built his side.
The manager has said previously that McCann is the sort of player his side "miss the most when he's not available", while Charles is a driving force from midfield and perhaps the best passer of the ball in the side, something all the more important in the absence of his brother's distribution from between the posts.
Moving Justin Devenny or Paddy McNair, regular starters at left wing-back and centre-back respectively, into central midfield roles is an option, although that would leave similar holes to fill elsewhere.
If not for his own injury, Spencer would have been the most obvious option to fill in for Devenny down the left flank.
For the Slovakia game at least, there is also the question of who replaces Galbraith with Northern Ireland to be without their entire starting midfield trio from their past four qualifiers.
With a small pool of players to choose from, the injuries will be a real test of Northern Ireland's depth and perhaps O'Neill's ability to find creative solutions.

5 months ago
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