Rangers remain on course for a clean sweep of the domestic trophies but they
were given an almighty fright by Motherwell.
The Tennents Scottish Cup holders had to come back from 2-1 down at half-time
to reach the final, having been thoroughly outplayed in the first 45 minutes.
James McFadden, the hottest property in Scottish football, had fired the
underdogs ahead after Steven Craig had cancelled out Bert Konterman's early
opener.
The game hinged on a three-minute spell in the second-half however in which
Michael Mols and then Lorenzo Amoruso were able to find the Well net.
A David Partridge own-goal was confirmation that Alex McLeish's side had
survived a very real threat and there was no time left for Well when Derek Adams
pulled one back with virtually the last kick of the game.
Those who had predicted a Rangers landslide against the Scottish Premier
League's bottom club must have thought their suspicions had been confirmed after
just 110 seconds when Konterman fired his side into the lead.
The Dutchman, who was continuing his role as makeshift midfielder, once scored
a famous cup semi-final winner against Celtic and today's strike was also a
well-struck effort.
Barry Ferguson took the ball past two men from near a corner flag and after
Adams had narrowly failed to cut out the pass, Konterman blasted in from the
edge of the box.
How could the league's worst side recover from such a blow inflicted by a side
seemingly destined for a domestic treble? The answer was with some style as
Terry Butcher's youthful side showed no respect for their more illustrious
opponents.
The equaliser came in the 15th minute when Lorenzo Amoruso cleared he ball
only as far as Martyn Corrigan, who sent teenager David Clarkson away down the
right.
The flag stayed down and the 17-year-old was able to square the ball for
fellow youngster Craig to convert ahead of two challengers from close range.
Then Well proved that was no fluke with a fine move that saw McFadden provide
an even better finish.
Stephen Pearson was twice involved, first finding Craig on the edge of the box
and then, after the striker had cut in and sent a probing ball forward, he
arrived in the danger zone to get a touch before Amoruso could intervene.
It was perfect for McFadden, who curled the ball over goalkeeper Stefan Klos
with the German being given no chance.
Clarkson should have made it 3-1 before the break when Amoruso fell over
instead of clearing his lines, allowing Craig to find the teenager unmarked at
the far post. The goal was at his mercy but he scuffed his volley well wide.
Michael Mols almost made Well pay for that miss when he motored away from Tony
Vaughan with the ball under his control. The Dutchman took the ball past
goalkeeper Francois Dubordeau but lost his footing just as he was beginning to
shoot and the ball ended up hitting the side-netting.
It had been a superb first-half performance by the underdogs, although it was
marred by a couple of unseemly incidents.
The first saw Vaughan and Mols square up following a foul by the defender and
while referee Mike McCurry was having words with the duo a brawl erupted nearby,
which saw Craig Moore and Adams booked as well as the original offenders.
Vaughan's temper did not cool down however and after he had narrowly escaped
giving away a penalty for pulling Shota Arveladze back he could clearly be seen
screaming in the Georgian's face.
It was no surprise that Arveladze was taken off at the break, with Steven
Thompson coming on, and within four minutes of the restart Ferguson had seen a
shot from the edge of the box bounce off the crossbar.
Pearson failed to hit the target with a free header before the game was turned
on its head once more.
Thompson was the architect of Mols' equaliser by first making sure he was not
caught in the offside trap and then sending the Dutchman in on goal with an
equally well-timed pass.
Three minutes later Amoruso rose unchallenged to meet a Fernando Ricksen
free-kick from the left touchline, after Corrigan had fouled Neil McCann, and
Rangers were ahead once more.
It had been poor defending to allow the Italian a free header and that moment
ended up costing Well the result their earlier performance had deserved.
The die was cast now and defeat was confirmed in the 72nd minute when
Partridge headed past his own goalkeeper after Kevin Muscat had crossed from the
right.
The final few minutes saw McFadden booked for furious dissent when McCurry
refused him a penalty. Muscat had stuck out a leg but there appeared to have
been little contact.
Pearson was lucky to stay on the pitch when he went in two-footed on Amoruso
but he escaped with just a yellow card.
Adams pulled a goal back with almost the last kick of the game after
substitute Richard Offiong had seen a shot deflected into his team-mate's path.
The result also means that the winners of Sunday's semi-final between Dundee
and Inverness are assured of a place in the UEFA Cup next season as Rangers are
certain to be in the draw for the Champions League qualifiers.
Teams
Rangers: Klos, Muscat, Moore (Malcolm 76), Amoruso, Numan,
Ricksen (Hughes 79), Konterman, Ferguson,
Arveladze (Thompson 45), Mols, McCann.
Subs Not Used: McGregor, McLean.
Booked: Moore, Mols.
Goals: Konterman 2, Mols 56, Amoruso 60, Partridge 73 og.
Motherwell: Dubourdeau, Corrigan, Vaughan, Partridge,
Hammell (Cowan 75), Adams, Leitch (Lehmann 86), Pearson,
McFadden, Clarkson, Craig (Offiong 68).
Subs Not Used: Woods, Lasley.
Booked: Vaughan, Adams, McFadden, Pearson, Offiong.
Goals: Craig 15, McFadden 27, Adams 90.
Att: 29,352
Ref: M McCurry (Scotland).