SHAUN ROONEY WAS again the hero as St Johnstone beat Hibernian 1-0 in the Scottish Cup final to secure an extraordinary cup double.
The 24-year-old wing-back scored the only goal in the Betfred Cup final win over Livingston at Hampden Park in February and made the difference against Hibs at the national stadium to confirm the greatest season in the Perth club’s history.
Rooney’s header after 31 minutes proved to be crucial, with Hibs keeper Matt Macey’s penalty save from Glenn Middleton with 15 minutes remaining ultimately rendered academic.
St Johnstone, founded in 1884, won the Scottish Cup for the first time in 2014 – their first major honour – and now have won two in the last three months.
Callum Davidson’s side are the first team outside the Old Firm to land the two major cup trophies in Scotland since Aberdeen in 1989/90 and have a place in Europe to boot.
Saints had been bedevilled by Covid-19 issues in recent weeks but Davidson had a full squad available with on-loan winger Middleton, hero of the semi-final win over St Mirren after coming off the bench, in the starting line-up.
Zander Clark, Liam Gordon, Ali McCann, Craig Bryson and Chris Kane were reinstated.
Attackers Martin Boyle, Kevin Nisbet and Christian Doidge, who had scored in every round, were among eight regulars who returned to the Hibs line-up after being left out against Celtic last week and they had the early pressure with Boyle having a fresh air swipe at a Jackson Irvine cross.
Saints slowly got a foothold in the game and a pass from Bryson found Kane just inside the Hibs box but the ball would not come down quickly enough and he fired over the bar.
In the 15th minute a darting solo run by Middleton ended with a shot deflecting off back-tracking midfielder Alex Gogic and comfortably saved by Macey.
Irvine then had a great chance in the 27th minute when the ball broke to him after midfielder Joe Newell tried to burst through the Perth rearguard but keeper Clark’s left foot blocked the shot from 12 yards.
Then St Johnstone took the lead with a straightforward goal, following good work by former Hibs players Callum Booth and midfielder David Wotherspoon down the left-hand flank.
When the Canada international swung a cross to the back post, Rooney leapt highest inside the six-yard box to power a header past Macey.
Newell fizzed a shot from the edge of the box over the bar in retaliation moments later but St Johnstone were buoyed.
Hibs came back out for the second-half fired up and just a minute later Nisbet fired an angle-drive wide of the far post.
Moments later, Gogic’s header from an Irvine cross was blocked by Perth defender Jamie McCart’s foot and after St Johnstone counter-attacked with pace, the supporting Rooney’s goal-bound shot from a loose ball came off Newell for a corner which was defended.
Hibs were putting everything into getting back on level terms but there was always the sense that St Johnstone could snatch a second.
That almost arrived in the 70th minute when Middleton drove forward on the break, then gathered the loose ball after his attempted pass to Kane broke kindly to him but his left-footed drive was saved by Macey.
Saints had the chance to double their lead from the spot after Hibs defender Paul McGinn’s tackle on Kane was deemed a penalty by referee Nick Walsh.
Macey dived to his left to brilliantly save Middleton’s spot-kick then blocked Kane’s effort from the rebound, giving the Leith side a lifeline.
Clark saved a Porteous header from a free-kick with 10 minutes remaining but Hibs could not take advantage of their penalty let-off and St Johnstone held out relatively comfortably to make history.
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Diageo not give them a dig out.
Oh, that’s right they are as Irish as Michael flately, beejaysus.
Drink local, support local
When people wonder why there are so few players produced in Ireland, this is why.
@Mogh Roith: can you elaborate?
I am from D12, one of soccers heartlands in Dublin, but in 2022.. no sport or club will survive with out a under age set up …James Gate never had this in my day …
@Exiled Dub: agreed. You need a feeder of some sort..expecting to pick off the best players once they move on from underage is not a viable strategy
Should serve as a warning to a few once big sides. If they don’t partner up with a schoolboy section they risk going defunct in a few short years. There are a few LSL sides that have a great history but are on their last legs.
And partnerships have to work both ways so they need to be bringing something to the table.
There are too many clubs in city’s and the country in general , if a guy can’t get a game with a club he will leave , he is not prepared to fight for his place anymore , this is just one problem . Also the standard of schoolboy player coming through is not of a standard to push for a place in a decent side , and if they are ? Then the academy’s will snap them up and promise them Loi football . These are only two problems outside of the obvious ones , which I won’t go into here .