Northern Ireland trio celebrate Wembley success after Bolton Wanderers thump Plymouth Argyle in Papa John’s Trophy final
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Two goals in the first 10 minutes from Kyle Dempsey and Charles – who was following on from scoring for Northern Ireland against San Marino in the recent international break - were Bolton’s reward for a thunderous start to which Plymouth had no answer, before Elias Kachunga and Gethin Jones scored after the break to reflect the gulf between the sides on the day.
Sixteen points separate fifth-placed Wanderers from Argyle in the league, but Ian Evatt’s side made a mockery of those standings by outclassing their high-flying opponents. They could have won by more but for some wayward finishing and a fine performance from goalkeeper Callum Burton.
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Hide AdA crowd of more than 79,000 – the highest at any ground in Europe this weekend – saw Bolton set a new record for the competition, becoming the first side ever to win by four goals in the final.
The opening goal came after only four minutes and could not have been simpler.
Declan John’s corner hung in the air and nobody in Arygle green picked up Dempsey, who stole in round the back and looped his header into the far corner.
Their second after 10 minutes encapsulated the breadth of Bolton’s attacking threat and was brilliantly worked.
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Hide AdKachunga carried the ball forward down the right and slipped it inside to Aaron Morley. The midfielder opened his body as if to shoot, but instead rolled it centrally to Charles who picked his spot and tucked it first-time past Burton.
Plymouth, who lost their lead at the top of League One to Sheffield Wednesday on Saturday, rallied, and threatened when Callum Wright broke and dragged his shot wide from 18 yards.
Yet defensively they could not live with Bolton, who nearly put themselves out of sight when Dempsey went in search of his second and his team’s third only to be denied from close range by a last-ditch block.
Bolton were playing through the third-tier title-chasers at will. Soon Dempsey again found himself clean through after Argyle dithered and lost possession in midfield. Again there was Burton so save his side’s blushes and stop Wanderers from running away with the final.
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Hide AdCharles blasted over from a promising position in the 30th minute after Dempsey had weaved his way through and played a neat cutback.
The game was effectively won three minutes after half-time and Plymouth were architects of their own downfall.
The ball was given away carelessly near the touchline and nobody in green had picked up the lurking Kachunga, leaving the Wanderers striker the simple task of advancing on Burton’s goal and rolling it home for 3-0.
From there, things only got worse for Plymouth but simpler and simpler for Bolton. Their fourth summed up the afternoon for both sides, Jones watching a corner onto his forehead and nodding the ball home unmarked to compound Argyle’s embarrassment.
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Hide AdWith 25 minutes still to play it became an exercise in damage limitation for Steven Schumacher’s side. That much at least they managed.
But this had been Bolton’s day. Their supporters have reason to be confident of a return visit for the League One play-off final in May.