Rovers' relegation moves step closer
Rovers' relegation moves step closer
http://www.unison.ie/irish_independe...&issue_id=1331
Shamrock Rvs 1
Dublin City 2
THE soap opera that is Shamrock Rovers Football Club took another unbelievable twist last night at a sub-zero Dalymount Park as lifelong Hoops fan David McGill condemned them to defeat in the first leg of the promotion/relegation play-off.
A blunder from substitute goalkeeper John Blake allowed McGill's speculative effort to settle in the net after 85 minutes adding to Aidan Lynch's rasping effort just before half-time. Trevor Molloy's penalty was scant consolation for Rovers.
Alan O'Neill opted for experience as Molloy, Mark Rutherford and Derek Tracey came in for Lee Roche, Mark Quigley and Cathal Sweetman respectively and interestingly Brian Shelley kept the captaincy despite Molloy's return.
But it was another older head, former Shelbourne stalwart Tony Sheridan, who impressed most as he showed some excellent touches throughout the opening period.
After five minutes his delightful back-heel set-up Tracey and the right-back, who played for O'Neill back in the mid-nineties, looped a tempting cross to the back post. Willo McDonagh attacked it, but headed straight at Brendan Kennedy.
Indiscipline could have cost Rovers four minutes later as Keith Doyle was guilty of a needless foul out on the right wing. Barry Murphy came to claim the resultant free-kick but failed to gather, injuring himself in the process and causing momentary panic in the Hoops defence.
Sheridan continued to shine up front as he provided chances for McDonagh again and Molloy through the middle period of the half but both failed to convert and Rovers couldn't make their pressure count.
They were given a warning of the Vikings threat on the counter-attack when David Freeman crossed for McGill to head narrowly wide on the half hour. Indeed Murphy looked decidedly uncomfortable and made no attempt to dive as he seemed to be feeling the effects of that earlier clash.
Then out of nothing a hammer blow for Rovers came just before half-time. One minute of injury time had been signalled by the fourth official and a lot of people were heading for a much needed hot drink on a bitterly cold night.
Maybe the Rovers players were thinking about it too as they allowed Aidan Lynch too much room outside the box. He unleashed a thunderbolt which again keeper Murphy didn't move for. Murphy lasted only three minutes of the second half as things seemed to be unravelling for the home side. But Cathal O'Connor lifted the increasingly frustrated support with a powerful left foot effort that rattled the crossbar on 51 minutes.
And that seemed to be the catalyst for a change in Rovers' luck as they were awarded a crucial penalty kick five minutes later. Ben Whelehan's clumsy block on Molloy, as he turned for goal, gave referee Paul Tuite little option but to give the decision and the striker calmly dispatched the ball to the bottom left hand corner.
But any effort that was expended to get back into the game evaporated with five minutes to go. An exchange of passes outside the Rovers box ended in the ball at McGill's feet and his goal leaves the most successful club in League of Ireland history staring relegation straight in the face.
SHAMROCK ROVERS - Murphy (Blake 48); Tracey, Foley, Shelley, Doyle; O'Connor, McDonagh, Kenny, Rutherford; Sheridan (Roche 76), Molloy.
DUBLIN CITY - Kennedy; Lynch (Pender 75), Keely, Whelehan, Hedderman; Scully, Shiels, McGill, Collins; Vaughan (Kelly 68) Freeman.
REF - P Tuite