Raith Rovers 3-4 Queen of the South, match report

Raith Rovers hosting Queen of the South on a dreich Friday night in Kirkcaldy, with a sparse attendance an inevitability, never seemed the most attractive of fixtures.
Queen of the South celebrate Derek Lyle's goal. Picture: SNSQueen of the South celebrate Derek Lyle's goal. Picture: SNS
Queen of the South celebrate Derek Lyle's goal. Picture: SNS

Scorers: Stewart (59, 78), Nade (62); Queen of the South - Baird (7) Reilly (50) Lyle (74) Russell (90)

A strange one for BBC Alba to select for television coverage, certainly.

How foolish that assumption now seems.

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The 1,552 paying fans – with a handful of hardy souls from Dumfries – and those tuning in to enjoy the action in the comfort of their own homes were treated to seven goals, a red card and a host of passable chances.

While the Gaelic commentary may have been unintelligible to most, the action spoke for itself as Rovers and Queens served

up a feast of football under the Friday night lights.

James Fowler – who might just be having second thoughts about this management lark given the stress he endured last night – saw his side claim a 4-3 win in the most dramatic fashion when they should have been out of sight by the hour.

They were holding a richly-deserved 2-0 lead and had already struck the woodwork twice by the 50-minute mark.

John Bairda, who is a hero round these parts after his extra-time goal against Rangers won the challenge Cup to end Rovers’ 20-year trophy drought, was first to strike, bundling home from close range after seven minutes when Ross Laidlaw fumbled a Danny Carmichael cross.

Baird and Gavin Reilly struck the bar and post respectively before they doubled the lead immediately after the interval.

Reilly eventually found his range, converting a perfect cutback from the excellent Carmichael from six yards. At this stage, it was a case of “how many?” for rampant Queens.

Then Rovers boss Grant Murray introduced Mark

Stewart to replace the ineffective Barrie McKay. It is the eternal question: does an inspired substitution indicate inspired management or an erroneous team selection to start with?

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Either way, the striker scored with his first touch of the ball, bundling past Zander Clark after being teed up by the busy Martin Scott.

Rovers, now playing in a more orthodox 4-4-2, were a different side and restored parity within minutes. Christian Nade prodded over the line after Clark had parried a ferocious Ryan Conroy shot.

Unlike his celebration at Easter Road, Nade managed to keep his shirt on as he wheeled away in delight.

However, Kevin Holt’s ill-timed tackling was exposed, and the Queens left-back was sent off for a wild challenge on Jason Thomson.

Fowler was determined to prove that anything his old Kilmarnock team-mate Murray could do, he could do better. His own super substitution saw Derek Lyle climb from the bench – before rising highest to head ten-man Queens into the lead.

Stewart hit back three minutes later, but this was a match which deserved a story-book ending, and Iain Russell obliged.

The experienced striker latched on to a neat Lyle knockdown and, with the the clock ticking down, fizzed a deflected drive past Laidlaw to claim all three points.

Raith Rovers: Laidlaw, Thomson, Watson, Ellis, McKeown, Conroy, Fox, Moon (Stewart 58), McKay (Anderson 58), Scott, Nade (Vaughan 87). Subs not used: Callachan, McGurn, Matthews, Bates.

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Queen of South: Clark, Kidd, Dowie, Higgins, Holt, Carmichael, Kerr (Dzierzawski 88), McShane, Russell, Baird (Fowler 73), Reilly (Lyle 71). Subs not used: Atkinson, Slattery,Hooper, Dean Smith.

Referee: A Muir.

Attendance: 1,552