The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Up in the air: Raith and Montrose hoping for Helicopter Saturday

Robertson desperate to make amends after penalty miss relegated Stark’s Park side

- by Neil Robertson

Raith’s Scott Robertson hopes to be flying high on Helicopter Saturday a year on from one of the worst moments of his football career left him feeling at “Ground Zero”.

Rovers are just 90 minutes away from going back up to the Championsh­ip at the first time of asking, knowing that a win over Alloa at Stark’s Park this afternoon will see them crowned League 1 champions no matter what season-long challenger­s Ayr do in their game against Albion Rovers.

Excitement is at fever pitch in Kirkcaldy which is in sharp contrast to last season when Rovers were relegated after losing their play-off to part-time Brechin City.

It all came down to a nerve-shredding penalty shoot-out in the second leg with Robertson, who had not played all season because of injury, missing his side’s last spot-kick and Brechin’s Andy Jackson converting his to secure promotion for the Angus side.

Now, former Scotland, Dundee United and Hibs midfielder Robertson is just delighted that redemption is within his side’s grasp. However he is fully aware that Alloa will present a formidable obstacle.

The 33-year-old said: “For me personally, I kicked the last ball for Raith Rovers last season with the penalty miss.

“So it probably took me until I was back in here getting my contract signed to actually get over the emotional sideeffect­s. I won’t go too far into it but it really got me down that we got the club relegated the way we did.

“Going through the season we certainly didn’t expect that to happen. We then went into the play-offs and didn’t expect that to happen so it just keeps kicking you further and further down.

“When it happens, you are just at Ground Zero – you can’t get any lower than that.

“So to get back in, amongst the boys again and to sign my contract . . . and the manager from the start of the season has generated positivity about the whole club. That’s what it was all about and it has got us to this point now where we just need to cross the finishing line.

“I am not saying it is going to be easy – far from it.

“Ayr have shown just how difficult it can be to get over that finishing line. So it is down to us now to take care of business.”

Opportunit­y knocks for Raith just two weeks after it looked like they had lost the chance of automatic promotion with Ayr establishi­ng a five-point lead.

However, the Honest Men lost against Stranraer and again last Sunday at Alloa, 24 hours after Raith had taken care of business with a win at Stair Park.

Ayr’s game at the Indodrill was live on BBC Alba but Robertson admitted he just could not face tuning in.

Robertson said: “I didn’t watch the Ayr game on Sunday. I think I would have had some sort of heart attack if I had, especially after checking how the scoring had gone and their missed penalty.

“I don’t think I could have put myself though that emotional rollercoas­ter.

“Obviously, I found out the result and it was the one we were hoping for given the position we found ourselves in after our game on Saturday.

“We now have a fantastic opportunit­y this weekend but that’s all it is.

“It is an opportunit­y that two weeks ago didn’t look likely but we now need to grasp. We never gave it up. We have had to rely on Ayr dropping points but even after the Arbroath game when we found ourselves five points behind, the realistic scenario was we would be in the play-offs.

“But mathematic­ally it wasn’t over and that has proved to be the case.”

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 ?? Picture: SNS. ?? Scott Robertson says he was at “Ground Zero” after worst moment of his football career.
Picture: SNS. Scott Robertson says he was at “Ground Zero” after worst moment of his football career.

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