The Scotsman

‘Fans cheered with tears in their eyes...

● It began in a blizzard but ended with Sunshine on Leith... former Hibs captain Rob Jones looks back on the unforgetta­ble day – 18 March, 2007 – when he scored the opening goal as the Easter Road club lifted the League Cup with a 5-1 victory over Kilmarn

- Moira Gordon

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On March 18, 2007, Rob Jones joined a small but select group of Hibernian captains to have successful­ly led his side to League Cup glory.

That day he chose to let his young team-mate and academy graduate Scott Brown join him in hoisting the silverware aloft, the moment proving habit-forming for the now treble treble-winning Celtic captain.

The Easter Road club have also gone on to follow up that triumph with a Scottish Cup win. But, 13 years on, the man who secured his place in the club’s history books by scoring the goal that laid the foundation­s for the triumph is content replaying the highlights of that day in his mind, although, he says, his son, Ethan, prefers the DVD.

“He is 13 and was there that day, although he obviously can’t remember it. But, to be fair, I came into the house just a few days ago and he was watching the DVD again. It is something both of my boys have been brought up on. It is part of our family history and a day I will never forget.

“It’s strange but I probably think about it more now that I have retired than I did when I was at the club. That’s just the way footballer­s are, we just think about the next game and then the next game. You don’t really take time to absorb it all at the time, but I have reflected on it a lot since I stopped playing and I realise how lucky I was to fulfil my boyhood dream of winning a cup final. To lead the team out as captain and then score a goal made it all the more special.”

Now a coach at a Leeds-based football academy, as he works towards his pro-licence, the 40-year-old former defender says that cup win, and the squad of players who helped the club to a first trophy win in 16 years, ensured that his affinity with the Leith side endures long after he returned south.

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“It is the second result I look for every week, The first is Sheffield Wednesday because I have always been a fan. But Hibs are a very special club to me.

“I remember so many big moments from that day from opening the curtains in the morning and everything was bright white. We were overlookin­g a golf course and it was covered in snow! Growing up you always think of cup finals as sunny days at the end of the season but the League Cup final

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was played part way through and we treated it like just another game.

“It was only when we got nearer the stadium that we started to appreciate that it meant so much more. It was two hours before kick-off but you could see the green and white and see on the faces of the fans how much winning meant to them. It was very special.”

It was also increasing­ly obvious that it was very different from anything he had experience­d previously.

“I had never played in a cup final before and I remember walking out on to the pitch and feeling quite emotional, and I don’t usually get emotional.”

But the Englishman topped that surge 28 minutes into the action, when, in the blizzard, he rose at the back post to head home David Murphy’s corner and set the team on the road to what would ultimately prove a convincing 5-1 triumph over Kilmarnock, with Abdessalam Benjelloun and Steven Fletcher grabbing a brace each, while the Rugby Park side’s only effort came from Gordon Greer.

“There is a picture of that goal on my

“I had never played in a cup final before and I remember walking out on to the pitch and feeling quite emotional... I don’t usually get emotional”

ROB JONES

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