Kilmarnock 1-2 Heart of Midlothian: Alex Lowry secures crucial win with injury-time strike

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Alex Lowry scoresImage source, SNS
Image caption,

Alex Lowry's winner came just a minute after he came off the bench

Alex Lowry's dramatic stoppage-time winner earned Hearts a Viaplay Cup semi-final place at the expense of Kilmarnock at Rugby Park.

Matty Kennedy went agonisingly close for the hosts before Jorge Grant stepped onto a well-weighted lay-off to sweep Hearts into a half-time lead.

Derek McInnes' side showed great determination in the second 45 and converted their attacking intent into an equaliser as Brad Lyons' forceful header beat Zander Clark.

But on-loan Lowry, who had only been on the pitch for a minute, shaped a low, curling shot into the bottom corner to win it in stoppage time.

The visitors recorded just their fifth victory in 12 games in all competitions this term, with the traveling support unfurling a banner criticising the club pre-match.

"I know we've been inconsistent - our performances are really good or flat - but I'm pleased we put on a performance," said head coach Steven Naismith.

"Ultimately, I won trophies as player and I want to do it as a manager. I know how good it is. We'll watch the games tomorrow and see how it plays out."

After both sides suffered disappointing results at the weekend - Hearts losing and Kilmarnock conceding an injury-time equaliser - neither side seemed in a hurry to make amends.

Lawrence Shankland failed to convert two opportunities in the early stages prior to Kennedy's run lighting up an otherwise dull opening.

Just as the half was petering out, Kye Rowles stepped into the final third as Hearts looked to recycle the ball following a failed attack.

He played a firm pass to the feet of Shankland, who cushioned it perfectly for Grant to step onto and curl into the bottom right corner.

A far more frenetic pace ensued after the interval with David Watson's snapshot fizzed wide as players began to lunge into crunching tackles with a greater frequency than previously.

Kilmarnock passed up a glut of opportunities as Danny Armstrong and Robbie Deas both failed to show enough composure in front of goal and a swerving Kyle Magennis effort skidded wide.

Their pressure then told as Kennedy, who impressed throughout, squared up Toby Sibbick and stole a yard of space with a cute double stepover. His deflected cross fell for Lyons to power the header back across goal.

But as extra time loomed, Rangers loanee Lowry showed patience in the box to tame the ball and angle a shot away from Dennis.

Player of the match - Jorge Grant (Hearts)

Image source, Rob Casey - SNS Group
Image caption,

He grew into this one, scored a lovely goal, was at the heart of a lot of the visitors' good play and had a good delivery on set-pieces. A good call from the manager to recall him

Hearts find reason to be cheerful amid unrest - analysis

Kheredine Idessane, BBC Sport Scotland at Rugby Park

This has the feel of a big result for Hearts, having been on a bad run prior to this. They showed plenty of appetite for the fight, lots of energy and endeavour, and in Shankland had a real focal point up front.

The Hearts fans displayed protest banners before kick off but at full-time they hailed a hard-fought win at a venue where they have only won twice in their last 10 visits.

The fact the winner came so late from Lowry added to the visiting fans' joy.

For Kilmarnock, there was nothing but disappointment and frustration. They couldn't take their chances and the marquee defeat of Celtic in the last round now counts for nothing.

That's now three games out of their last five that they've conceded a goal after the 90th minute.

What they said

Hearts head coach Steven Naismith: "The conditions were tricky but, overall, I thought we played really well.

"I've asked [Alex Lowry] to show moments of quality, not potential, and he comes up with an unbelievable moment."

Kilmarnock manager Derek McInnes: "I thought we were terrific second half. We had four or five shots in the first five or six minutes of the second half and there was a real belief about us.

"We dragged the cup tie to where we needed it to be and we got a deserved equalise but we are guilty of naivety towards the end.

"It's almost as if we were losing and had to throw caution to the wind but we didn't. We've paid the ultimate price."

What's next?

Kilmarnock host St Mirren on Saturday (15:00) while Hearts travel to Dingwall to face Ross County at the same time. The Tynecastle side will discover their opponents in November's semi-finals on Wednesday night.

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