Kilmarnock 2-1 Arbroath: Rugby Park side seal Scottish Championship title
- Published
Kilmarnock have won the Scottish Championship after a dramatic comeback against nearest rivals Arbroath at Rugby Park.
Blair Alston's 89th-minute winner completed the turnaround after the hosts fell behind early in the match.
James Craigen's ninth-minute goal seemed to have given Arbroath the title momentum, but Ash Taylor's stabbed equaliser set up a tense finish.
The Ayrshire side return to the top flight at the first time of asking.
The result takes Kilmarnock four points clear at the top, uncatchable with just one game remaining.
The maroon smoke drifted across the pitch from the away end as a raucous atmosphere engulfed a packed Rugby Park - a mood that has been missing since Steve Clarke's tenure.
The first half played into Arbroath's hands, with Kilmarnock registering just two shots in the first 45 minutes and the visitors took advantage of the hosts' poor play, charging up the pitch on the counter with Scott Stewart slipping it to Craigen.
The former Partick Thistle man, who secured the Jags' promotion to the top flight in 2013 with a goal against Morton, looked like he had fluffed his shot but the ball crept into the bottom corner.
Luke Donnelly, who helped set up the first goal, almost doubled Arbroath's lead just before half-time, getting on the end of a Michael McKenna cross and flicking past the keeper, but it was not on target and Kilmarnock cleared.
The second half was a much different affair, with Kilmarnock suddenly acutely aware of the task at hand after a nervous and timid opening exchange. The hosts ramped up the pressure as Derek Gaston denied Oli Shaw before Kyle Lafferty and Taylor both saw headers drift high and wide.
The Northern Irish striker - who battled referee John Beaton more often than the Arbroath back-line - did have the ball in the back of the net at one point, but he was about five yards offside at the time.
With 13 minutes remaining, Kilmarnock took their chance. Fraser Murray nodded a header at goal with Gaston saving instinctively, but it dropped to the feet of Taylor who stabbed at goal and Nicky Low could only clear the ball into the roof of his own net.
Despite that set-back, the Arbroath shot stopper was doing his utmost to keep his side in the title race denying Murray twice with acrobatic efforts.
There was little he could do to stop the winning goal. Arbroath were caught flat footed as Kilmarnock launched a counter of their own, with Alston rolling the ball into the bottom corner from the edge of the box to spark scenes of jubilation.
Kilmarnock manager Derek McInnes spoke to BBC Scotland: "What a way to win it. It was no more than we deserved.
"I thought Arbroath were the better team in the first half. I thought we were too pumped up, too erratic, too excitable.
"The perseverance of the team was clear, the winning mentality of the team was brilliant and to score so late on was fantastic. I'm absolutely delighted for so many people but it shows what this place can be.
"We battered Arbroath second half. We eventually got the second goal and it was no more than we deserved because of the chances we created. I thought we were outstanding second half."