Mooney the difference

A goalkeeping performance from Noel Mooney that balanced tentatively between the ridiculous and the sublime featured prominently…

A goalkeeping performance from Noel Mooney that balanced tentatively between the ridiculous and the sublime featured prominently as Cork City staged a second-half recovery to give themselves the initiative after an enthralling League Cup final first-leg at Tolka Park last night.

The Cork goalkeeper gifted Rovers an early lead, and was guilty of a second crass error that was not so costly, before making a string of superb saves to keep his side in the match in the first-half.

Then, in total contrast to their sheepish showing in the opening 45 minutes, Cork utterly ran the game in the second-half and Rovers had to thank their goalkeeper, Tony O'Dowd, for not having to travel to Turner's Cross for the second-leg in three weeks' time with this trophy all but decided.

Both sides made changes, the most surprising being in the Rovers team with central-defender Terry Palmer coming in to play in the centre of midfield in place of the out-of-form Billy Woods.

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Cork arrived in some confusion. Already without the suspended pair of Kelvin Flanagan and Greg O'Halloran, Patsy Freyne didn't play due to flu, while Pat Morley's eligibility on the cup-tied rule was only confirmed eight minutes before kick-off, which meant he started on the bench.

It scarcely got any better for Cork against a fired-up Rovers who were in front within 10 minutes courtesy of a dreadful blunder by Mooney. Rovers midfielder Marc Kenny, who had just sliced a shot wide a minute earlier, collected a throw-in from Matt Britton to send in a cross close to goal and Mooney, expecting the ball to hit the post, palmed it into his own net.

Mooney, the hero of Cork's quarter-final win when saving three penalties in Derry, soon redeemed himself with a superb one-handed save after Jason Sherlock had skipped through onto a Derek Tracey pass on 23 minutes.

But the rattled Cork goalkeeper almost gifted Rovers a second goal a minute later when he fumbled a well-struck shot from Kenny before scampering back to prevent the ball crossing the line.

Mooney's Jekyll and Hyde night continued on 31 minutes when he did well to hold a glancing header from Tony Cousins and then made an excellent diving save to turn a stinging 30-yard free-kick from Kenny round a post.

Cork, hardly in the match at all, then caught Rovers square at the back six minutes before half-time when Dave Hill released Caulfield. Thankfully for Rovers, O'Dowd was more alert to the counter-attack than his defence and got out quickly to make a smother save. There was a far more hunger in Cork's game after the break. Another sublime save by O'Dowd from a low drive by Ollie Cahill kept Rovers in front while Derek Coughlan blazed over the crossbar, all within eight minutes.

But it was a different match now and, inevitably, Cork deservedly levelled on the hour.

A Mark Herrick cross into their box wasn't cleared and the pressure on the Rovers goal was maintained when Hill's centre was struck first time by Brian Barry-Murphy from the edge of the box to flash past O'Dowd into his bottom left-hand corner.

The Rovers goalkeeper then came into his own to keep his side in with a chance for the second-leg with terrific saves from Barry-Murphy, Caulfield, twice, and Herrick.

Shamrock Rovers: O'Dowd; Britton, Whelan, Brazil, Dunne; Tracey, Kenny, Palmer, Colwell; Cousins, Sherlock. Subs: Woods for Tracey (54 mins.), Markey for Kenny (77 mins.).

Cork City: Mooney; O'Donoghue, Coughlan, Daly, Cronin; Herrick, Hill, Barry-Murphy, Cahill; Dobbs, Caulfield.

Referee: J Stacey (Athlone)

Veteran Cork City striker John Caulfield was yesterday named as the Opel Soccer Writers' Association of Ireland player of the month for November.

It is the 34-year-old's third time to win this particular award in a domestic career spanning fifteen years.