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Season 1998-99 Tranmere Rovers (a) Worthington Cup Third Round |
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31 mins: Dalglish 1-0
Ruud Gullit said:
manager
tbc:
Independent
match report: Paul Dalglish, son of the man who routinely
terrorised defences on the other side of the Mersey and latterly managed
Newcastle, evoked memories of Kenny's trademark composure to convert his first
goal in senior football and decide this bristling encounter. For half an hour Tranmere outplayed
Newcastle with a sense of purpose that belied the one-division gulf in status.
Shay Given, the Newcastle goalkeeper, stood defiantly between them and their
spiralling aspirations, saving splendidly from Kenny Irons and David Kelly. In the later stages, too, Given's reflexes
resisted Tranmere as his defenders reeled in desperation under the bombardment
of prodigious throw-ins from the substitute Dave Challinor. In between, however, Newcastle might have
extended their lead, briefly raising the standard of their game. Nolberto
Solano gave another demonstration of his resourcefulness and that sweet right
foot, while Stephen Glass hit the Tranmere crossbar with an audacious 30-yard
effort. Ultimately, Newcastle were thankful merely
to clamber over this prickly hurdle. Alan Shearer was generally a peripheral
figure and, without the driving influence of Robert Lee, their midfield was
similarly ineffectual for much of the evening. Lee was the only significant absentee from
Newcastle's line-up, an indication that the manager, Ruud Gullit, approached
this tie with more than a passing interest. His team's elimination from Europe
has served to focus Gullit's attention on this often-maligned cup as a
realistic route to success this season. The two sides exchanged long-range shots in
a brisk, open start, although it was Irons who produced the accuracy, making
Given lunge anxiously to his right to effect the save. A couple of minutes
later, the ubiquitous Tranmere captain was clearing Shearer's header off the
line, and then stretched Given to another excellent stop. Kelly created more danger for Given,
intelligently allowing the ball to run across his body before whipping his low
shot goalwards. The keeper was content to turn the ball behind. Dalglish, having failed to capitalise on
two early breaks, was more assertive with a powerful rising shot, and John
Achterberg, in Tranmere's goal, settled for the tip-over. On the half hour,
however, Achterberg was left stranded as Dalglish ran on to Solano's pass,
calmly carried the ball around the keeper and slid it into the vacant net. Glass's majestic effort might have put
Newcastle in the clear but the ball bounced back off the crossbar, reviving
Tranmere's optimism in the process. Challinor's throws virtually pinned
Newcastle into their own area. Given saved from Irons with his foot and Kelly
pulled a shot wide. For all that, Dalglish almost added a second near the end.
But then we had had enough nostalgia for one night. |
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