Airdrie 1, Hearts 0
ANDY Smith was like an overgrown schoolboy as he pranced around in his
short trousers at the end of the match. Alan Lawrence, wearing a grin as
wide as a goalmouth, led a delegation to the east stand where Airdrie's
supporters were gathered, and Kenny Black seemed to be wandering across
Hampden's vast expanse in a daze. Airdrie in their second Tennents
Scottish Cup final in three years? How could this be possible?
Airdrie's manager, Alex MacDonald, and his back-up team had suspected
another cup final appearance would be possible, but few were willing to
go along with them, although they won converts to their way of thinking
soon after the ball started rolling at the national stadium.
When Steve Cooper rose unmolested in Hearts' box after 29 minutes and
headed the ball beyond Craig Nelson, believers flocked to MacDonald's
camp. Memories of past triumphs over teams from Edinburgh helped make
Airdrie even more positive while the opposite was the case for Hearts
throughout the remainder of the first half.
They played like a team haunted. They had lost to Airdrie after a
penalty shoot-out in the semi-final of the '91-92 competition and defeat
again was closing in on them. They did perform better in the second
half, but Airdrie's defence, with Jimmy Sandison, Sandy Stewart, and
Paul Jack immense, were comfortable under pressure and, when they were
breached, John Martin threw himself across his goal like the hero his
supporters have always known him to be.
At one stage late in the match the keeper dived to save from Gary
Mackay and crashed into a post damaging a thigh. The post was rattled
and fortunate to survive, but Martin had to hobble for the remaining
minutes and couldn't kick the ball out.
However, the former miner later dismissed concern about his injury.
''It's nothing, I'll be all right,'' he said in the manner of a good,
old-fashioned hero. ''You know me, I'd go through a brick wall for this
team.''
Martin, the club's longest-serving player, could have been speaking
for all of the others because they had a steely-eyed look about them on
Saturday. In the seconds before kick off they glared across the halfway
line staring their opponents down.
Airdrie's cup tradition -- they have played 13 ties this season and
lost only once, and even that defeat was after a penalty shoot-out
against Raith Rovers in the semi-finals of the Coca-Cola Cup -- and a
fierce desire to reach another final gave them the edge over the
Tynecastle side, who were not helped either by injuries to key players.
It was pointed out after the tie that Jim Bett and Brian Hamilton were
hampered by groin and hamstring injuries respectively, but it would be
an injustice to diminish Airdrie's achievement. The Diamonds deserved
their place in the final and are entitled to believe they can go all the
way.
The Lanarkshire side's preparation was faultless and the strategy
almost perfect, with MacDonald deciding to play Andy Smith wide on the
right in midfield where he was able to prevent Hearts' John Millar from
making runs into the penalty box. Smith coped well and took time out to
surge down the right and deliver the crucial cross for Cooper.
Hearts had three tall men -- Dave McPherson, Willie Jamieson, and
Craig Levein -- in there, yet Cooper was allowed time and space in which
to rise and meet the ball. That single goal, stout defending, poor
finishing, and the bravery of Martin was enough to secure Airdrie's
place in the final.
Although Tommy McLean's side had most of the pressure in the second
half their play lacked sparkle and it was a measure of their frustration
perhaps that of the five players booked, four wore maroon shirts.
Airdrie's Kenny Black was cautioned after having kicked the ball away
while Jamieson, Bett, Millar, and David Hagen were booked.
Also, John Robertson was ordered off five minutes from time after he
had allowed himself to become involved in an exchange with substitute
Anthony Smith, and a miserable afternoon was completed for Hearts.
Robertson was a picture of dejection as he trudged off wearing on his
head a white bandage. The striker had collided with Jack early in the
match and required the covering as protection from further injury.
One wonders what medicine the Tynecastle medics may possess to help
ease broken hearts.
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