The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Main goal: Winning the cup all Well striker cares about

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Motherwell striker Curtis Main has only one thought ahead of the William Hill Scottish Cup final and that is to secure the trophy.

Main’s single-track mind was evident in the semi-final when he raced from the halfway line to the edge of the box before finishing emphatical­ly to claim his second of the day and round off a 3-0 victory over Aberdeen.

And he has a clear goal in mind. Celtic are aiming to seal an unpreceden­ted consecutiv­e treble and will have close to three times the Motherwell support – but Main will not travel to Hampden with any sense of inferiorit­y or thoughts about merely enjoying the atmosphere.

“We’re not there to make up the numbers,” the 25-year-old said.

“We are there to win the final, that’s it.”

Motherwell have secured cup victories over Premiershi­p rivals Ross County, Aberdeen (twice), Rangers, Hamilton, Dundee and Hearts this season and are out to avenge their Betfred Cup final defeat by Celtic, who have drawn twice at Fir Park this season.

“We’ve been to Hampden a few times, well me just the once, but the lads reached the cup final earlier in the season,” Main said.

“We have got the experience of being there, that won’t be an issue.

“Again we play Celtic in the final but when the whistle blows, it’s 11 men versus 11 men. Whoever wants it more will come out on top.

“When it comes down to a knockout situation we have been very good at coping with that and being the team that wants it more.

“We have shown on the run to the final previously, and to this final, that we can cope with whatever challenge is put in front of us. Saturday is that final challenge and we’re confident we can go there and take the trophy home.

“We’re not interested in doubletreb­les. We don’t care about that. We are interested in Motherwell lifting the trophy.”

Main is not alone in his attitude. Manager Stephen Robinson has ensured his squad have been pulling in the same direction since overseeing a major turnaround in players with 17 summer signings.

Main followed in January and was immediatel­y struck by the “togetherne­ss” at Fir Park.

“Not just the boys in the dressing room or the coaching staff, everybody around the training ground and stadium,” he said.

“Everyone feels like they are all part of one thing rather than certain staff this side and that side. It feels like it is all one, which is a nice feeling.”

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