The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

An A-Z of Saints’ run to Hampden glory

It started in Fife and finished at Mount Florida. Eric Nicolson looks back on St Johnstone’s historic Betfred Cup run

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Ais for Absent friends – A penny for the thoughts of Callum Hendry and Danny Mcnamara on Sunday afternoon. Hendry played an important part in the cup run with his equaliser in the last-16 clash against Motherwell and, of less significan­ce, also scored a late penalty in the group thrashing on Brechin City. Incredibly, Mcnamara didn’t kick a ball in the competitio­n. On Republic of Ireland U/21 duty for the pool games, he was injured for Fir Park and then benched when Saints faced Dunfermlin­e in the last eight. To think Perth fans were (understand­ably) disconsola­te when he was recalled early by Millwall. As good as Mcnamara was for Saints, and as good as he is now at the New Den, the ‘what if Shaun Rooney didn’t play’ doesn’t bear thinking about.

B is for Backing from supporters – This year’s competitio­n was unique for obvious reasons but that is exactly why St Johnstone fans should be even prouder of their efforts than if this had been a normal Hampden occasion. The big billboard outside the Cherrybank Inn was ingenious and provided a backdrop for countless social media posts. Perth supporters made cup final week an online triumph.

C is for (Liam) Craig – Don’t take my word for the above, just ask Liam Craig. He soaked up every last bit of the build-up and was all the more motivated as a result. And what a fairtyale story it was for the man who missed out on 2014 by popping off to Hibs for a couple of years making it seventh semi-final and first final lucky. It was tear to a glass eye stuff when he spoke to us with a medal around his neck in the Hampden main stand. D is for Dave Mackay – It was a cold night at East End Park for the quarters, so with hats and masks on we barely recognised each other as I walked past him at half-time of Saints’ game against the Pars. Now

James Mcpake’s assistant at Dens Park, he was there to check out Dundee’s next league opponents. Looking back, it was fitting that the 2014 captain was at one of the matches in the cup run.

E is for Eight months. That’s all it has taken for Callum Davidson to become a cup-winning manager. When he trotted up the Hampden stairs to seek out his chairman he was asked whether it was to state his case for a pay rise or to announce he was quitting because things couldn’t get any better. The tactically astute training ground boss, whose strategies got the better of Jack Ross and David Martindale, had a stellar playing career. His management one may even surpass it.

F is for Free to air – I’m all for live broadcast rights going to the highest bidder. But no highlights of a national cup final on terrestria­l TV isn’t acceptable. A commitment to do so should be nonnegotia­ble when the contract goes up for auction.

G is for Guy Melamed – I had my concerns about the side Davidson chose at Dunfermlin­e but the players got the job done in the end and for the semi and final he was proved right with his tactics and team selections when many (myself included) would have fielded a different formation and picked Melamed. The Israeli was incredibly unlucky not to play on Sunday, in particular, and I do feel that Saints would still have won had he started.

H is for Hat-trick Stevie May scored one against Brechin and David Wotherspoo­n passed up the opportunit­y to do the same when he let Hendry take a late spot-kick to get him off the mark for the season. It didn’t prove to be the turning point for last season’s top scorer that Wotherspoo­n would have hoped, but it did underline the fact that the famous Saints team spirit was still alive and well.

I is for Internatio­nals – Saints already have two in Ali Mccann and

Wotherspoo­n but will one or more of the young guns at the back get called up for Scotland duty anytime soon? That’s not usually how it works unfortunat­ely – you have to leave Mcdiarmid Park to do that. Zander Clark should be a serious contender for the No 3 goalie position at the summer Euros (how could you pick Robby Mccrorie ahead of him after Sunday’s game?). The lack of friendlies will hurt the chances of Steve Clarke taking a look at Shaun Rooney and Jason Kerr in the spring but if Ryan Porteous and Stephen O’donnell are selected ahead of them then they would have every right to feel aggrieved.

J is for Jamie Murphy – Never has a player being too fancy with a finish proved so important for St Johnstone. Saints were under sustained pressure when the Hibs forward tried to get too cute with a chip over Clark in the semi, the ball struck the bar and the rest is history.

K is for Kleenex – If Liam Craig got waterworks going for good reasons, Murray Davidson did the same for the wrong ones. Seeing him alone with his thoughts, mask on and hood up, in the middle of the pitch while his pals were getting changed for the final (another one) he was missing through injury was horrible.

L is for Local lads – There were three of them with winners’ medals – Liam Gordon, David Wotherspoo­n and Stevie May. So much for Perth not producing talented footballer­s. The fact that they took different routes to the top highlights the merits of the academy structure and the oldschool boys’ club set-up. There is room for both.

M is for Masked winger – What a sight Craig Conway was when he came on as a sub at Dunfermlin­e. We couldn’t miss him but he’d have struggled to see us, mind you. With facial protection for a recently broken nose that he described as more suited to welding than profession­al

football, peripheral vision was a no-no. Thankfully Conway was mask-free when he was landing crosses on to the head of Rooney at Hampden in January and February.

N is for Not once but twice – It still feels ridiculous that there are three St Johnstone players who have won both national cups. It truly is an incredible achievemen­t for May, Wotherspoo­n and Michael O’halloran.

O is for Omens – There was no ‘May 17’ or anything close on this occasion. But if only the ‘Saints on this Day’ Twitter account hadn’t waited until game-day to let us all know the club had won the Perthshire Cup twice on February 28 (1903 and 1931), it would have spared so many people a lot of anxiety. How could Davidson’s boys fail?

P is for Penalties – That could have been P for prepostero­us as well. Because that’s how Saints fans would have described the notion of their team winning a penalty shootout of any consequenc­e. There was a time not very

long ago when they stopped shouting for spot-kicks during a game because they knew whoever was put up next would find a way to miss. So to all the men who held their nerve at East End Park when there was serious pressure during those walks from the halfway line (and the big man between the posts), I doff my cap.

Q is for Quiz question – Now that Saints have played Kelty Hearts in an SPFL competitio­n, the Lowland League club will be the answer when you are asked who the closest ‘as the crow flies’ fixture for the Perth side are. Until they draw Jeanfield Swifts in the Scottish Cup, that is. It feels like a lifetime ago now, but Saints were toiling when this first group game was up next. They couldn’t score a goal and there was even chat of Steven Maclean being brought out of retirement. Nobody was talking about lifting the trophy before – or indeed after – that game.

R is for Rooney – Couldn’t be anything else really. I’ll admit it, the rise

and rise of Shaun Rooney has been utterly astonishin­g. There’s all the stuff about Danny Mcnamara, on top of which Tommy Wright’s last signing probably produced one of the poorest Premiershi­p debuts I’ve ever seen at Rugby Park. But the bounce-back speaks volumes for his character and determinat­ion and his manager’s coaching. Not only has he been transforme­d, the team has, too. Pre-rooney they lacked any sort of dead-ball threat whereas now they (he) provide arguably the most potent one in the country. And in open play, he pops up at the back post more than a lot of No 9s. A wingback with his speed, power and shooting ability is quite the asset.

S is for Skipper – Jason Kerr wasn’t playing well before Christmas. There was the stupid tackle that got him sent off in Paisley and cost his team dearly and he was subbed against Livingston around that time for football rather than injury reasons. But, along with that man Rooney, I’d

put Kerr’s return to form down as the biggest reason Saints have won this cup. He is now playing better than ever and was the captain and leader his side needed at Hampden (twice). He scored two crucial goals – one to turn the semi-final and one to get the whole thing moving at Kelty.

T is for Turnaround at Fir Park – Aside from the penalty shoot-out against Dunfermlin­e, the point of greatest League Cup jeopardy on reflection was when Motherwell were leading 1-0 in November. Hendry deserves to be remembered for his 68thminute equaliser but this was Michael O’halloran’s afternoon. I’m going to put it above anything Rooney went on to do as the best individual display by a Saints player in the whole cup run – maybe even the season. And it was as a wing-back! He was unplayable and you felt relieved for left-back Ricki Lamie when his manager eventually took him off. O’halloran might not have got on the pitch in the final but he can look at his

second winners’ medal and know he did his bit.

U is for Undefeated – They didn’t win all their group games like Livingston but the only bump in the road for Saints was the penalty shoot-out bonus point they lost to Dundee United. It proved to be good practice for the real thing at Dunfermlin­e.

V is Victory parade – Forget the ‘won’t the moment have passed’ argument. This is St Johnstone, not Liverpool. Trophy-winning is not habitual and the appetite to celebrate will not disappear even if coronaviru­s restrictio­ns stretch into next season. The opportunit­y the club have got to take time to plan this properly not only means, as Callum Davidson put it, Saints can “do it right”, they can also do it differentl­y and maybe even better.

W is for Wind and rain of Peterhead – The group decider was played at Balmoor and we got the first sighting of Mr Melamed in St Johnstone colours. The occasion required a profession­al job,

which it got. There was also a Rooney own goal. Hero status would have to wait.

X is for ex-players – Jody Morris, Michael Duberry, Peter Macdonald, Chris Millar, Nick Dasovic, Attila Sekerliogl­u, Steven Anderson, Graham Cummins, James Dunne and plenty of others I won’t have noticed posted their best wishes for their old club on Twitter on Sunday morning. And even more, like Dave Mackay, got in touch with players and club officials privately. Saints won the game, but they also won the build-up.

Y is for Young star, Alex Ferguson – That Liam Craig was waiting to be picked up by the Hampdenbou­nd team bus alongside a player half his age puts into perspectiv­e his own longevity and the importance of grabbing this unexpected last chance of winning a trophy. What must the 17-year-old have been thinking? If he goes on to fulfil his own expectatio­ns, and those of coaches inside the club, big games will come the way of the midfielder with a name

that will bring a bright spotlight upon him. Let’s hope that 74 minutes into the game against Brechin on October 10, 2020 will be remembered as the moment a great Saints career began.

Z is for Zander – Clark traded starts in the group games with Elliott Parish but by the time the quarterfin­als came round there was no rotation of the goalkeepin­g position. He saved a crucial penalty to give Craig the opportunit­y to clinch the victory and it was Clark’s command of his penalty box in the opening half-hour of the semi-final that built the platform for what happened thereafter. The same was true of the final. Although he was a virtual spectator from the moment Saints went in front, the early punch to clear a dangerous free-kick and then a save to deny Josh Mullin were big moments. Clark was the reassuring presence his manager needed, just like Alan Mannus was seven years earlier. They both have winners’ medals and clean-sheets to show for it.

 ??  ?? FINALLY: Liam Craig got his hands on a trophy in St Johnstone colours.
FINALLY: Liam Craig got his hands on a trophy in St Johnstone colours.
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 ??  ?? Clockwise, from top: Shaun Rooney, proving quite an asset with his speed, power and shooting ability; Murray Davidson, who missed out again through injury; Masked winger Craig Conway in the win at Dunfermlin­e.
Clockwise, from top: Shaun Rooney, proving quite an asset with his speed, power and shooting ability; Murray Davidson, who missed out again through injury; Masked winger Craig Conway in the win at Dunfermlin­e.

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