Saturday April 28, 2012
Irn Bru SFL Division 2
Airdrie United
2-0
Lynch 52
Bain 88
East Fife
SUPER-SUB Jamie Bain may have put the Diamonds closer to the First Division play-offs thanks to his late strike adding to what could be vital goal difference.
However one player further away from the play-offs is Willie McLaren, sent off at the death for violent conduct along with East Fife's David White.
The home side were missing Ryan Donnelly, red carded against Dumbarton last week and ex-Diamond Ryan Wallace was missing for the visitors.
In what was a drab first half, both sides couldn't capitalise on the few chances they created.
Willie McLaren saw his cross go wide, whilst Craig Johnstone had a shot blocked by Diamond's skipper Paul Lovering.
Jamie Stevenson attempted a dipping shot but it didn't dip low enough to give the home side an advantage.
They got their advantage five minutes into the second half when John Boyle played in Sean Lynch who squeezed through the defence to make it 1-0.
Scott Morton, who came in for Donnelly in the line-up, should have made it 2-0 with an almost identical move but his shot went wide.
East Fife's makeshift forward line of Dalziel and McQuade had a few chances again but they weren't getting anything past Grant Adam, the keeper staying in the side despite being stretchered off only a minute into his midweek appearance for Scotland U21s.
Two minutes from time Bain got the ball at the edge of the box and cut inside with his right foot to hit it in the bottom left corner past keeper Michael Brown.
Shortly after McLaren and White were given their marching orders for going nose to nose after a late challenge on the former.
The win keeps Airdrie in 4th spot, two goals ahead of Stenhousemuir going into next week's crucial last fixture against champions Cowdenbeath.
Gordon Durie's East Fife could also find themselves in the mix, but today's defeat puts them three points and eight goals behind the Diamonds (and six goals behind the Warriors who play Forfar).
Douglas Barrie at New Broomfield.
Photographs © Robert Dalzell. Click to view full size.