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Stuart Findlay is Hearts last action hero as Derek McInnes' magic start roars on at Tannadice
Stuart Findlay is Hearts last action hero as Derek McInnes' magic start roars on at Tannadice

Yahoo

time19 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Stuart Findlay is Hearts last action hero as Derek McInnes' magic start roars on at Tannadice

Stuart Findlay was the Hearts hero as he netted what proved to be a dramatic last-gasp winner against Dundee United at Tannadice. Jam Tarts skipper Lawrence Shankland opened the scoring with a penalty against his former side with the hosts bouncing back strongly before the break thanks to an Ivan Dolcek double. Findlay equalised just before the hour mark for Hearts before popping up at the death to secure all three points. READ MORE: Tony Bloom Hearts breakfast leaves Blair Spittal hungry to taste success with the bravado left for afters READ MORE: Ben Brannan stuns Hibs with goal of the season contender as Kilmarnock fight back in Leith goalfest – 5 talking points The visitors made a bright opening and were the first to threaten in the eighth minute when Frankie Kent got his head to a Harry Milne corner but the big defender could not trouble United keeper Yevhenii Kucherenko with the ball sailing over the bar. However, the capital side broke the deadlock in the 19th minute. United defender Iurie Iovu grappled Findlay to the ground inside the home box with referee David Dickinson pointing to the spot. Hearts skipper Shankland stepped up and calmly struck his penalty into the bottom corner, sending Kucherenko the wrong way. That lead only lasted three minutes. United were awarded a free-kick 25 yards out following a foul on Owen Stirton and Dolcek's effort flew high into the back of the net despite the best efforts of Clark, who got a hand to the ball. The Terrors then took the lead in the 42nd minute. Pan Camara threaded a great ball through to Dolcek with the Croatian hitting a shot that Clark could not keep out at his near post. Hearts pinned the Terrors back at the start of the second half and equalised in the 58th minute. Harry Milne sent an in-swinging corner from the left towards Findlay who powered a header high past Kucherenko. And in the 94th minute, Findlay pounced to seal the win for his side with another fine diving header from a Alex Kyziridis corner. Here are our five talking points. Homegrown flavour Plenty of eyebrows were raised when Dundee United took the field in their UEFA Conference League 2nd qualifying round tie against UNA Strassen last month without a single Scot in their starting line-up for a competitive game for the first time in their history. However, Terrors boss Jim Goodwin had three home-grown players against Hearts in the shape of Craig Sibbald, Owen Stirton and Miller Thomson. The latter two came into the 11 that began against Rapid Vienna in Austria on Thursday night along with Ivan Dolcek for Will Ferry, Max Watters and Isaac Pappoe. United though were pretty much down to the bare bones with a host of youngsters and two keepers on the bench. Hearts made just one change to the starting line-up that kicked off the league campaign with a 2-0 win over Aberdeen on Monday night at Tynecastle with Alan Forrest coming in at wing-back to replace the injured Christian Borchgrevink. What an advert for the game Scottish football has no shortage of critics but this match was a terrific advert for the game in this country. It was end-to-end stuff from the first minute with no quarter asked or given. Considering United's efforts in Vienna on Thursday night, they matched a Hearts side that flew out of the traps and did well to respond so quickly after the hammer blow of going behind to Shankland's penalty thanks to Dolcek's double. That was enough to convince boss Derek McInnes to make a double change at half-time with Forrest and Kent coming off to be replaced by Michael Steinwender and Alex Kyziridis. The big question was, could United keep that pace going in the second stanza? The initial signs were ominous for the home support with United pinned back early on and it was no surprise when Findlay equalised. However, the Terrors will be absolutely devastated to lose so late on. Players who caught the eye? United's Dolcek took his goals incredibly well and the Croatian looks like another shrewd signing by Goodwin with Pan Camara also hugely impressive in midfield while keeper Kucherenko showed why he has already become a cult hero with the home fans with his all-or-nothing goalkeeping. Hearts Claudio Braga was a menace to the home defence while Findlay took his goals well and was solid at the back but Zander Clark will probably feel he could have done better at both United's first-half goals. Early promise for Jambos According to new investor Tony Bloom, Hearts have a very good chance of at least being second in the Scottish Premiership this season. The Brighton owner has pumped nearly £10 million into the Tynecastle club and he will no doubt be happy with the return on his investment so far. Hearts have now won their first six games of the season in a row and sit proudly atop the Premiership table - the early signs are certainly promising for Bloom. Bigger fish to fry? United boss Jim Goodwin has entered the last 10 months of his contract and it is understood a host of clubs down south are monitoring his situation after what he has achieved at Tannadice, taking the Terrors all the way from the Championship into Europe. One thing is certain, Goodwin should have no trouble picking his players up for what is the undoubted game of the season so far against Rapid Vienna at a packed and raucous Tannadice on Thursday night with the tie delicately poised at 2-2 following the first leg in Austria. Full house There was a bumper 10,874 crowd inside Tannadice and they produced a cracking atmosphere. The Hearts travelling support were vocal throughout and there was another big turn-out from the home fans. Incredibly, after this afternoon's match, Dundee United will not play at home again in the league until September 26 against Kilmarnock.

Wrexham end defeated but defiant on their long-awaited Championship return
Wrexham end defeated but defiant on their long-awaited Championship return

New York Times

time3 days ago

  • Sport
  • New York Times

Wrexham end defeated but defiant on their long-awaited Championship return

The agony was etched across every Wrexham face. Just 13 seconds remained of six added minutes at the end of a pulsating fixture when Jack Stephens broke Welsh hearts with a dramatic winner. Worse still, Phil Parkinson's side had actually led on 90 minutes, Josh Windass' penalty separating two teams who last season had been playing two divisions apart. Advertisement But then came the first of two body-blows to illustrate just how ruthless the Championship can be, as Ryan Manning's curled free-kick to level the scores was followed by Stephens' late, late decider. No wonder there were so many crestfallen expressions among the 3,000-strong travelling contingent as referee James Bell blew the final whistle to signal Wrexham's first game at this level since 1982 had ended in defeat. What was also evident, however, was an air of defiance. 'Wrexham, Wrexham, Wrexham,' chanted the Welsh hordes in unison, the pain of such a gut-wrenching defeat partly eased by how well their team had played against a Southampton side strongly fancied to bounce back into the Premier League at the first attempt. 'A lot to build on,' said Parkinson, who will assess over the weekend the ankle injury that forced Kieffer Moore out early in the second half. 'A really strong performance with a lot of new players and a lot playing at this level for the first time. We just needed that second goal. 'When we are able to reflect, it was a really proud day for us as a club. It is important now we keep representing the club like we have these last four years.' It had all been so different 75 minutes earlier. With Wrexham's Championship return half an hour old, there had been an air of impudence as the travelling fans sang, 'Are you Chester in disguise?' Whether Southampton have ever previously been compared to a team about to embark on their eighth straight season in National League North, the sixth tier of English football, is unclear. But all the locals could do was suck it up. To be fair to the noisy visitors from Wales, the swagger in the stands had been matched by the confident manner in which their team had taken to a game that had caused something of a stir on the south coast. Advertisement This much had been apparent a couple of hours before kick-off when two portable billboards were parked outside St Mary's Stadium, their purpose to beam an image of the Hollywood hills, complete with the word 'Southampton' spelt out in big white letters. If those arriving for the Saturday lunchtime kick-off still did not get the message, a parody of the 'Welcome to Wrexham' poster that advertises the documentary of the same name, complete with Will Still as 'The Gaffer', was interspersed with the Hollywood image. Again, the 11 letters that make up the port city were inserted for 'comedic' effect. As with the familiar opposition chant 'Where were you when you were s***?' — unusually, not heard on Saturday — such antics are taken as a back-handed compliment by Wrexham loyalists. After years of being ignored, suddenly their club matters again. And sure, there were plenty of American voices cheering on the visitors in the Saturday lunchtime kick off, including a Super Bowl-winning coach who had flown in just 24 hours earlier with his family to join the party. But there was also a sizeable hardcore present who had been there throughout the bleakest of bleak days. The fight for survival under the ownership of Alex Hamilton, the non-League defeats against tiny teams who, in other circumstances, would not have been on the same pitch and the famous weekend, almost exactly 14 years ago, when fan power saved a proud but badly failing football club. The story of how supporters banded together to raise £100,000 in 24 hours — one even pledged his wedding fund — to avoid being booted out of the fifth-tier Conference is why any opposition chants about glory-hunting fails to glean the anticipated response. It's also why returning to the second tier after 43 years meant so much, even to the more recent additions drawn in by the Welcome to Wrexham documentary, fans whose knowledge of those dark days is second hand. All this emotion made a throaty rendition of club anthem Wrexham is the Name at kick-off particularly apt. As were the many tributes paid to Joey Jones, Wrexham's greatest servant who passed away last month at the age of 70, on this historic day for the club. Advertisement 'It's surreal to see us back at this level after all these years,' said Michael 'Scoot' Hett, the lead singer of the Declan Swans who became a breakout star of the Welcome to Wrexham documentary. 'Never in my wildest dreams did I envisage watching Championship football again.' Super Bowl winning coach Paul McCord, his wife Mindy and son LJ are at the other end of the supporter-scale, having been among those who caught the Wrexham bug through the show. Living on the other side of the Atlantic wasn't going to prevent them being in the away section. 'We just had to be here,' said McCord, a member of the coaching team who took the Baltimore Ravens to Super Bowl glory in 2001 and fell for Wrexham via the documentary. 'Four years of going to football and four tiers of football. It's been more magical than Disney. Trust me, I live in Florida.' For 90 minutes, Wrexham did, indeed, look like making supporters' dreams come true courtesy of an impressive team display. They were organised, used the ball well and caused all manner of problems for a Southampton side boasting such quality that Cameron Archer, Ben Brereton Diaz and Ross Stewart — three forwards who would surely walk into most teams at this level — had to be content with places on the bench. Plenty caught the eye in Wrexham's change colours of green and yellow, particularly among the debutants with Moore leading the line wonderfully with able support from Windass and Lewis O'Brien bringing plenty of energy to midfield. Defeat was perhaps most harsh on Conor Coady, who was truly outstanding marshalling a back three which also featured Championship rookies Max Cleworth and Lewis Brunt. 'We know we are here to disrupt and upset a few teams in this division,' said Coady, once of the England national setup. 'I felt we did that today, bar maybe 10 minutes at the end of the first half and then the end of the second half. We have shown we can play.' What defeat did underline is the fine lines that exist in this division. Had Ryan Hardie converted when one-on-one against Gavin Bazunu with just a couple of minutes remaining then, surely, Southampton's fightback would never have materialised. As it was, Bazunu's fingertip save paved the way for that crazy, crazy ending. Welcome to the Championship, indeed. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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