Scottish
League Cup Semi-Final, Sunday 2 February 2014, Easter Road
Hearts had an all too brief
respite from their travails of league business with a League Cup semi-final
against Inverness Caledonian Thistle at Easter Road on Sunday. It was a
re-match of the same stage of the competition a year and a week ago. Sadly, the
outcome was different; whereas in 2013, Hearts were the victors after a penalty
shoot-out, this year it was the Highlanders, who were reduced to nine men, who
emerged victorious after another penalty shoot-out.
Hearts had re-arranged their
midweek SPFL fixture against St. Mirren in order than Ryan Stevenson could
complete his two match suspension following a red card at Perth a couple of
weeks ago. Ironically, with Hearts winning the two games in which the former
Ayr United man was missing, Stevenson didn’t start the semi-final, taking his
place on the substitutes bench alongside Hearts new on-loan signing from West
Ham, Paul McCallum.
Hearts boss Gary Locke began
the game with the same side that defeated St. Mirren on Wednesday but they were
almost behind after just three minutes when a mistake by skipper Danny Wilson
allowed Caley Thistle’s McKay to set up Draper but his effort went over the
bar.
John Hughes’ men looked the livelier of the sides in the early
stages but Hearts eventually pulled themselves into the game. Sam Nicholson’s
pace and trickery was causing the Jags defence problems and his effort from 20
yards produced a decent save from Brill in the Caley Thistle goal. Dale Carrick
then headed over when he really ought to have found the target as play raged
from end to end. The best chance of a goalless first half, however, fell to
Caley Thistle’s McKay on the stroke of half-time. The striker got ahead of his
Hearts namesake Brad before firing in a shot which Hearts keeper Jamie
MacDonald did brilliantly to save.
As happened in last year’s semi-final, Inverness took the lead
early in the second half. From 20 yards out Tansey fired in blistering shot
which whistled past MacDonald to put the Highlanders a goal up.
This seemed to ignite Hearts and
Callum Paterson produced a superb save from Brill before Caley Thistle were
reduced to ten men when Warren was shown a second yellow card of the afternoon
when he fouled Sam Nicholson. From the free-kick, Ryan Stevenson rolled the
ball to Jamie Hamill whose shot took a deflection before nestling in the net to
level the scores at 1-1. The Hearts fans celebrated and they were ecstatic two
minutes later when Hamill scored again, this time with a magnificent 20 yard
free-kick.
Jamie MacDonald then produced a wonder
save from Meekings but this was the Caley Thistle defender’s last involvement
before being sent off for a late challenge on Scott Robinson. Hearts were 2-1
up against nine men as the regulation 90 minutes drew to a close and a third
cup final appearance in less than two years seemed on the cards. However,
calamity struck when shoddy defending from Hearts allowed substitute Ross to
squeeze the ball past MacDonald in the final minute to take the tie to extra
time.
Caley Thistle defended resolutely
during the extra half an hour and Hearts, despite their numerical advantage,
just could not break them down. Newcomer Paul McCallum, on as a substitute, had
the best chance at the end but couldn’t direct his header on target.
So the tie was decided by a penalty
shoot-out. After Shinnie missed his kick for Thistle, Paul McCallum had the
opportunity to make an immediate name for himself – but he also missed his spot
kick. Danny Wilson and Dale Carrick scored for Hearts but Jamie Hamill, so
often hero from the penalty spot missed his kick. Caley Thistle converted their
remaining penalties and so progressed to the League Cup Final with Aberdeen on
16 March.
It was a bitterly disappointing end to
the game for the Hearts supporters in the crowd of 12,762. Their team’s failure
to see out a game against opponents who had just nine players was quite frankly
an embarrassment and some fans weren’t slow in making their feelings known as
the Maroon Army trudged out of Easter Road.
Afterwards, Gary Locke struggled to
contain his anguish. “We only have ourselves to blame. It was a great
opportunity to get to a final. Defending in the last minute, we had chances to
get rid of the ball before we did. But there’s nothing we can do about it now.”
Inverness
Caledonian Thistle:
Brill, Raven, Shinnie, Vincent, Warren, Meekings, Watkins, Tansey, McKay,
Draper, Doran.
Hearts: MacDonald, McKay, McHattie, Hamill,
McGowan, Wilson, Smith, Robinson, Carrick, Paterson, Nicholson.
Referee: John Beaton
Att: 12,762
Top
man: Jamie Hamill.
Been there, seen it, done it often.
ReplyDeleteNothing new to see here, let's just keep moving on to the next anti-climax.