The Romance of the Scottish Cup saw Spartans come moments
away from forcing extra time in the Edinburgh Derby only for Frankie Kent to
deliver broken hearts with a headed winner deep into added on time.
A sell-out attendance of 3,500 packed into the Ainslie Park
arena, the clunk clunk of the turnstiles delivering the capacity crowd for the
lunchtime kick-off. Willie Wonka would
have been lucky to have had a golden ticket to hand out for this one. Those who weren’t lucky were afforded the
luxury of viewing live on the BBC, from neighbouring flats or, for the
enterprising spectator view, on top of a parked transit van, complete with
deckchair for comfort.
As teenage piper Gregor Wildgoose led the teams out to a
rousing reception, the young Spartans Ultras displayed their new TIFO accompanied
by a cacophony of noise.
With much press attention on the visitors line-up ins and
outs, the small matter of Spartans playmaker Cammy Russell not having fully
recovered from injury for a starting berth appeared to fly under the watchful
eyes of the media, one of them perhaps focussed on the hope for headlines of
heroic Scottish Cup scalp.
The young home support were in fine voice from the off
however the first cheers of the afternoon came from the grassy banks of the
Pilton Avenue end, albeit decidedly muddy come kick-off due to the overnight
rain.
With 12 minutes on the clock, Jorge Grant sent a long
hanging delivery to the back post where Kenneth Vargas was on hand, or head for
that matter to nod neatly into the net.
Not the start the home side were naturally looking for
however the defence regrouped and regathered.
Then came the first chance of their one.
Former Scottish Cup winner Callum Booth pulled out a
thunderous drive from fully 25 yards forcing Craig Gordon to pull off a save to
match the delivery. It was a shot that
warmed the goalkeeper’s gloves and the fans who snaked round the four parts of
the ground.
Watching the save from the other end was Blair
Carswell. No doubt there was a small
level of begrudging applause of his shot stopping hero that denied the leveller
however it was the Spartans Cat who was to have one of the finest games of his
career on one of the biggest stages.
As the game edged towards the interval and the masses set to
much a home record number of Bain of Stenhouse pies and assorted savouries,
Carswell was called into action to prevent Vargas from doubling the Hearts
lead, thankfully Tagawa could only send the rebound over the bar.
HT: The Spartans 0-1 Heart of Midlothian
No changes were made at the break and that man Vargas was
once again proving to be a real threat as he raced into the box but it was an
exceptional save from Blair Carswell to deny the Jam Tarts man.
Jordan Tapping and James Craigen were both called upon to
get their defensive heads to dangerous crosses as the dogged determination of
the Spartans team continued to show resilience and offer a bit of nerves
amongst the visiting crowd to consider that this tie was far from done and
dusted.
Then, in the 65th, it was all square. Callum Booth collecting the ball out by the
corner flag sent a long ball to the edge of the box for James Craigen who let
rip and sent a sensational volley beyond a stranded Craig Gordon into the net. Cue absolute scenes within the home support
and with just a quarter of the match to go, could the Spartan Army faithful begin
to dream?
Spartans made their first change of the afternoon with just
over ten minutes left as Danny Denholm replaced Kieran Watson.
With the game entering the final stages of the ninety, once
again it was Blair Carswell who came to Spartans rescue whilst frustrating the
Jambos as he pulled off perhaps his finest save of the game to somehow deny Grant
down low at his far post. An extraordinary
save from an exceptional keeper.
Perhaps with the thought of an additional 30 minutes on the
horizon there was a brace of Spartans changes with Sean Brown and Cammy Russell
replacing Blair Henderson and Jamie Dishington.
Then, with the game in two minutes into added on time, Cochrane
launched a corner kick into the box where Kent was to leap the highest to send
his header into the back of Carswell’s net.
There was enough time on the clock to make one final change,
with Alan Brown making his 300th appearance in Spartans colours,
coming on for Rhys Armstrong.
Sadly there was little time left to make it a fairytale landmark
appearance and with that, Willie Collum made one final peep of the whistle to
signal the end of an exciting game and another year’s Scottish Cup run.
FT: The Spartans 1-2 Heart of Midlothian
Man of the Match: Blair Carswell