The Bannsiders won the Irish Cup after a wonderful decider at Windsor Park
Clear Water Irish Cup final: Coleraine 3 Dungannon Swifts 2Coleraine claimed the Irish Cup following a thrilling five-goal final against a dogged Dungannon Swifts side at Windsor Park.
With Ruaidhri Higgins’ men finishing the league campaign like a train by winning all five of their post-split games and the Swifts losing all five of theirs, the result certainly went according to form.
But the men from Tyrone played a full part in a wonderful showpiece occasion for the local game, and might well have maintained their hold on the trophy but for fine margins that didn’t go their way.
Playing as a makeshift striker, Sean McAllister took the fight straight to Coleraine, spinning into space before testing Ryan Schofield with a low shot that skidded off the wet surface and thudded off the goalkeeper’s chest.
Seconds later, the 23-year-old took advantage of uncertainty in the Bannsiders’ box to fire an acrobatic volley at goal that Schofield tipped over.
For his next trick, McAllister surged down the left before slipping an inch-perfect pass into Kealan Dillon, who wasted a golden chance by prodding weakly at Schofield from eight yards out.
Coleraine finally came into the game, with Joel Cooper taking the ball off team-mate Matthew Shevlin’s toes to drill a shot across goal that Declan Dunne pawed wide, before Shevlin passed up a great opening by taking a loose touch in the box when a first-time finish might have paid dividends.
The striker was much sharper in the 19th minute as he pounced on an awful mix-up in the Dungannon defence. Dunne and Caolan Marron both attempted to cut out a Lyndon Kane cross from the right but got in each other’s way and there was Shevlin to fire into the unguarded net.
Dungannon almost hit back straight away as Leo Alves showed wonderful technique to smash a volley at goal that Schofield pushed over, and from the corner, Marron got up to head Alves’ cross against the post
It was breathless stuff, and while the chances dried up for a spell, the pace never relented, with both sides going at full throttle all the way to the break.
On the restart, the question was whether the teams could maintain that intensity. Coleraine did, but the Swifts didn’t, and they paid a hefty price as they suddenly found themselves 2-0 down in less than a minute.
Shevlin got up well to flick a long ball into the path of Cooper, who motored away from Cahal McGinty before burying a clinical finish low past Dunne.
Dungannon lack nothing in courage, however, and halved the deficit in the 55th minute.
Alves raided down the left before cutting the ball back across goal where McAllister laid it off to Paul Doyle, who took a touch before curling a brilliant shot beyond Schofield’s grasp from just outside the area.
Their joy was short-lived, however, as Coleraine restored their two-goal cushion on the hour mark.
Zane Okoro had been on the margins of things but burst into the box from the left and let fly, with the unfortunate Marron getting a block in only for arch-poacher Shevlin to gobble up the loose ball and poke it past Dunne.
Back came Dungannon, with McAllister now causing havoc down the right after Andrew Mitchell came on for Dillon to play up top. And it was that pair who gave Swifts renewed hope in the 66th minute when a cross from McAllister unhinged the Coleraine backline and Mitchell used his power to get to the breaking ball and nudge it home from close range.
Coleraine’s game management had been questionable up until that point but they now sought to take the sting out of a tiring Dungannon side, with Cooper dropping deeper to help his side keep possession for long spells.
With time running out, the Swifts opted to start going long and when Mitchell challenged Schofield in the air and both men hit the deck, it looked like McAllister was primed to fire at the open goal but referee Steven Gregg whistled for a foul on the Coleraine keeper.
From there, the Bannsiders comfortably saw out seven minutes of additional time to bring the Cup back to the north coast.
Want to see more of the stories you love from Belfast Live? Making us your preferred source on Google means you’ll get more of our exclusives, top stories and must-read content straight away. To add Belfast Live as a preferred source, simply click here.








You must be logged in to post a comment Login