Republic of Ireland assistant manager Roy Keane is confident Harry Arter will bounce back from his Euro 2016 disappointment and enjoy a bright international career. The Bournemouth midfielder suffered a thigh injury on the eve of Tuesdays warm-up game against Belarus and has been ruled out of Martin ONeills squad for the finals.Ireland already have concerns about the fitness of skipper Robbie Keane and midfielder James McCarthy, and are not prepared to take a risk over a third player. Keane said: There are only so many players you can bring with you who are carrying knocks - and I think Harrys is more than a knock. Republic of Ireland assistant manager Roy Keane (R) Its disappointing, but Harry is a young player and its only a matter of time that he is back in the group for the next campaign.Anyone here who has played sport, injuries are part and parcel of the game and we had no control over that.Ive seen him play at club level and he is a good player who can deal with the ball, which really helps in international football because you do get a bit of time. Republic of Ireland assistant manager Roy Keane was not happy with his sides performance against Belarus But hell be back. Its not the end of the world for him.Arter may have a role to play in the World Cup qualifying campaign which gets under way in September, and he could be joined at some point in the future by Callum ODowda. Callum ODowda shielding the ball during Republic of Irelands game with Belarus The 21-year-old, who helped Oxford to promotion from League Two this season, so impressed the management team during his time with the Ireland squad that he has stayed on to train with the remaining 23.ODowda made his international debut as a substitute in Tuesdays 2-1 defeat and impressed on a night when not too many others did.Keane said: Hes a nice kid and hes got a nice way about him. Weve previously seen him with the Under-21s, but its good to get a close look at him. Hes a confident lad, he has had a good season at club level and it was good to get him on because its good to work with young players who have not been brainwashed yet. 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OAKLAND, Calif. -- The confident aura the Golden State Warriors are giving off right now might be the only thing brighter than those yellow shirts every home fan is expected to be wearing again for Game 3 against the San Antonio Spurs on Friday night at ear-piercing Oracle Arena. Maybe for good reason, too. The Warriors have outshot, outrebounded and outhustled the Spurs through the first two games of their Western Conference semifinal. And if not for an unprecedented collapse in Game 1, Golden State would be returning to the Bay Area with a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series instead of being tied. Stephen Curry, Klay Thompson and the hot-shooting Warriors have shown no signs of slowing down in the playoffs. The dynamic backcourt duo has left the second-seeded Spurs searching for answers. And while theres still a long way to go in the series, sixth-seeded Golden State is no long acting like an underdog. "Were in the drivers seat right now. We control our own destiny. I feel like this is our time," Thompson said during a light shootaround at the teams downtown Oakland headquarters Thursday. "We put in so much work and its paying off. And its just beginning. Weve got to stay humble." At the moment, theyve sure humbled San Antonio. The Warriors have held the lead for 95 of 106 minutes, with most of the Spurs slim advantages coming in the two overtimes in Game 1, when San Antonio rallied from 16 points down in the final four minutes of regulation to a stunning victory. Golden State has outrebounded the Spurs 105 to 93, outshot them 48.3 per cent to 41.7 per cent and outworked -- and perhaps outcoached -- San Antonio in almost every way imaginable. "We cant blame it on just luck," Spurs guard Manu Ginobili said. "They did a great job, and we did a really poor job. Weve got to give them credit. They played much better than us, and miracles dont happen that often. We didnt deserve Game 1, either. Weve got to do better over there, because playing like this, we dont have a chance." San Antonios championship pedigree is about to really be tested. As good as Golden State looked in San Antonio, it has been far better at home all season, especially in the playoffs. The Warriors went 3-0 at home in the first round against Denver, with Curry seemingly controlling the standing-room only crowds on his fingertips -- and feeding off fans as well. The Spurs were 0-2 at Golden State this sseason, though San Antonio rested most of its starters in one of them.dddddddddddd The next game at Oracle Arena -- a raucous venue even when the Warriors were terrible -- might be the franchises biggest game in Oakland since 1991, when Golden State returned home with its second-round series against the Lakers tied at a game apiece -- only to lose three straight and be eliminated in Game 5 in Los Angeles. In the playoffs for only the second time in 19 years, excitement in the basketball-starved Bay Area is at a fever pitch. The Warriors can unite fans with conflicting allegiances in a way almost no other team can in the sports saturated market. Buses in San Francisco and Oakland have electronic banners that read: "Go Warriors." San Franciscos iconic Coit Tower has been lit with blue-and-gold lights, and fans on both sides of the bay can be seen wearing those yellow "We Are Warriors" shirts given out at home playoff games. With a sea of support behind them, all the Warriors need to do is win their home games to advance to the conference finals for the first time since the 1975-76 season. "The skys the limit for us right now," said Thompson, who had a career-high 34 points and 14 rebounds in Golden States 100-91 win Wednesday night, even joking at practice that he "felt like Steph Curry out there" shooting 8 of 9 from 3-point range. "Our confidence is at an all-time high," Thompson added. "Weve shown we can beat this team, and we just have to stay humble about it and keep working hard because its a long series." Golden State already has overcome two major hurdles. The Warriors rebounded from what could have been a devastating Game 1 collapse. And they "exercised the demons," as Curry put it, by winning in San Antonio for the first time since Feb. 14, 1997 -- four months before the Spurs drafted Tim Duncan out of Wake Forest and began a run that includes four NBA titles. Even Spurs coach Gregg Popovich, a two-time NBA Coach of the Year, has marveled at what his veteran-laden team is up against. During one television timeout captured on the TNT broadcast in Game 2, he told his team in the huddle: "They got skill. They got talent. Weve got to be on them." "They shot the heck out of it," Popovich said at the airport before his Spurs boarded a flight to the Bay Area on Thursday. "Thats the difference." ' ' '