Irish Cup final: Waterworth double as Glentoran beat Cliftonville

Video caption, Glentoran come from behind to beat Cliftonville 3-1 after extra time in the Irish Cup Final at Windsor Park.
  • Author, Lyle Jackson
  • Role, 91热爆 Sport

Two goals form Andrew Waterworth helped Glentoran win the Irish Cup for the first time since 2004 with a 3-1 victory over Cliftonville.

Waterworth equalised in the 64th minute after Joe Gormley had given the treble-chasing Reds a first-half lead.

The final went to extra-time and Jimmy Callacher headed the Glens 2-1 up before Waterworth shot in the third.

Ciaran Caldwell of Cliftonville and Glentoran's Richard Clarke were sent-off near the end.

They got straight red cards for clashing as Clarke reacted furiously after being stamped on by Barry Johnston.

Image caption, Jimmy Callacher headed Glentoran into a 2-1 lead in the Irish Cup final

Clarke was back in the dressing room as his Glentoran team-mates completed a remarkable triumph under manager Eddie Paterson, who had been sacked by Cliftonville just two years earlier.

And a day to remember too for veteran Glens defender Colin Nixon, who came on as a substitute for a record 794th and final appearance.

To lift the cup along with skipper Elliott Morris was a brilliant finale for Nixon, but that fairytale ending looked unlikely after a first half dominated by Tommy Breslin's double winners.

Cliftonville should have been ahead before Gormley's breakthrough goal.

Gormley somehow missed a glaring chance from just a few yards while Boyce swept a low left-foot shot just wide.

The goal which the all-conquering Reds had been threatening did come when Boyce slipped the ball through to Gormley.

Keeper Morris raced out to block but, when the ball came off defender Callacher, it fell for Gormley who forced in the opener.

The goal meant Gormley, plucked from Amateur League obscurity with Crumlin Star just two years ago, became only the third player in Cliftonville's 134-year history to score 30 in a season.

There was a brief delay to the action after a couple of missiles were thrown on to the pitch from the north stand where Glentoran fans were accommodated.

Glentoran produced a much better display in the second half and ultimately denied the Solitude side a historic domestic treble.

Waterworth, in what could be his last game in a Glentoran shirt having been linked with a close-season move to Linfield, struck a close-range equaliser.

Richard Clarke played the ball in from the left, David Howland did well to turn it into the danger area and Waterworth pounced instinctively to shoot in from about five yards.

Boyce then had a header saved by Morris while Glens substitute Jim O'Hanlon sent a low shot wide.

Cliftonville would have taken the lead early in extra-time but for a wonder save by Morris from substitute Martin Donnelly's first-time effort.

That looked all the more crucial as Callacher got ahead of his marker Aaron Smyth to head the Glens into a 2-1 lead in the ninth minute of extra-time.

Two minutes later Waterworth worked his way into the box and netted an angled shot to make it 3-1.

Cliftonville seemed to have run out of steam after their superb season.

The double dismissal of Caldwell and Clarke was a disappointing ending - but it will not overshadow a memorable day for Glentoran.

The east Belfast club has been dogged by financial problems and, earlier in the season, players refused to train because they had not received their wages.

Money cannot buy the feeling of being a cup winner - boss Patterson and his Glens heroes end the season well in credit.

Cliftonville: Devlin, Seydak, Smyth, McGovern (O'Carroll 60), McMullan, Garrett (Cosgrove 82), Catney, Johnston, Caldwell, Gormley (Donnelly 70), Boyce.

Glentoran: Morris, Ward, Magee, Callacher, Hill (Nixon 109), McAlorum, M Clarke (O'Hanlon 70), R Clarke, Howland, Carson, Waterworth.

Referee: Arnold Hunter