Daily Mail

Owls flying high after taking down Toon

Keeper Dawson hopes Cup win can lead to happier Hillsborou­gh times

- CRAIG HOPE at Hillsborou­gh

WHEN Sheffield Wednesday goalkeeper Cameron Dawson was born in the summer of 1995, his hometown club were in the Premier League and Chris Waddle was their star player.

By the time he started going to Hillsborou­gh as a supporter, they were in the third tier. They have bounced between there and the Championsh­ip in the two decades since. But occasions like this, with Waddle in the stands and full of praise for a ‘special night’, remind you that this club belongs in neither of those divisions, and certainly not League One, where they currently reside in second position.

Yes, as Owls boss Darren Moore admitted, Wednesday were boosted by Newcastle’s weakened teamsheet, but it still included a £60million striker, £40m midfielder and £32m defender. That was before £100m’s worth of talent arrived from the bench.

So while Goliath used its might to dominate — Newcastle had 22 shots and 75 per cent possession — they looked like a clumsy giant in front of goal. David, by comparison, used its stones sparingly and savagely. They had to smash, grapple and grab at times.

Josh Windass was the hero with two goals inside 13 minutes in the second half, but Dawson had made sure they arrived at that juncture still level. The shot count alone tells you he could hardly sit back and enjoy the show, like his fellow Wednesdayi­tes had. But when the 27-year-old came to reflect, he was able to apply some perspectiv­e.

‘I have never seen the good days of Wednesday,’ he said. ‘I saw the League One struggles. I was there when we won promotion to the Championsh­ip in the play-off final at Cardiff in 2005. That is my first big memory, but then it was tough days in the Championsh­ip, relegation, and then promotion.

‘But since I have been in the building, it has been tough. To be involved in a relegation out of the Championsh­ip again (2020-21) was hard. So to have nights like this and to feel we

are turning it around, it is great for everyone, especially the ones who have seen the bad times.

‘It is there for everyone to see what this football club could be like. If we keep on going in the right direction, we can have nights like this more often. Hillsborou­gh was rocking.’

Only once since the start of October have Moore’s side been beaten, and even that was in an EFL Cup penalty shootout against Premier League southampto­n.

supporters talk with confidence regarding the structure now in place at Hillsborou­gh, from Moore and the recruitmen­t team to the ambition of Thai owner Dejphon Chansiri. For all the turbulence of recent years — and expectatio­n here still leads to grumblings of discontent concerning Moore’s playing style — it feels like they are on course for a smooth passage back to the Championsh­ip.

‘any footballer will tell you they don’t want to ply their trade in League One or League Two,’ added Dawson. ‘Every League campaign is not plain-sailing from start to finish. we had a tough patch in terms of performanc­es, but still managed to grind out results, so it was never doom and gloom from our side. we knew we would turn the corner.’

In turning the corner, they drove Newcastle boss Eddie Howe around the bend, such was their resilience. Kieran Trippier called Dawson ‘unbelievab­le’. Twice he saved from alexander Isak in the first half when the £60m striker looked more likely to score. The home crowd twisted the volume dial clockwise in the wake of those super stops.

and this old ground was swaying by the time windass pounced from close range in the 52nd minute before following up with a first-time steer from 20 yards in the 65th minute. Bruno Guimaraes responded for the visitors but the home side survived a nervy finish.

‘what a game, what a cup tie,’ said waddle, who played for both clubs. ‘Give wednesday massive praise, they had a go at Newcastle. They didn’t sit back, they were only forced back the last 15 minutes. Newcastle will be kicking themselves, they had glorious chances and could have put the game to bed. But wednesday deserved it for the commitment they showed, it was fantastic.’ SHEFFIELD WEDNESDAY (3-5-2): Dawson 8; Iorfa 7, McGuinness 7, James 7; Palmer 7 (Hunt 88), Dele-Bashiru 5 (Adeniran 46, 7), Byers 6.5 (Bakinson 90), Vaulks 6.5, Johnson 6.5; WINDASS 8.5 (Wilks 90), Smith 7 (Paterson 88). Scorer: Windass 52, 65. Manager: Darren Moore 7. NEWCASTLE UNITED (4-3-3): Dubravka 5.5; Manquillo 6.5, Lascelles 5.5, Botman 6, Lewis 5 (Trippier 69, 6); Anderson 5

(Willock 60, 6), Longstaff 6 (Guimaraes 60, 6.5), Joelinton 6; Murphy 5 (Almiron 60, 6), Isak 6.5 (Wood 46, 5), Ritchie 6. Scorer: Guimaraes 69. Manager: Eddie Howe 5. Referee: Michael Salisbury 6.

Attendance: 25,884.

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 ?? SHUTTERSTO­CK ?? First blood: Windass beats Dubravka to put Wednesday ahead
SHUTTERSTO­CK First blood: Windass beats Dubravka to put Wednesday ahead
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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Main man: scorer Windass celebrates with his team-mates
GETTY IMAGES Main man: scorer Windass celebrates with his team-mates
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Hurt: Guimaraes can't hide his dismay
GETTY IMAGES Hurt: Guimaraes can't hide his dismay

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