Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Utd squad is strong says goalie Zwick

- BY TOM DUTHIE

THIS time last year Luis Zwick had been given plenty of game time but it’s fair to say that wasn’t all good news for the young German.

With Dundee United deciding to go for youth i nstead of finding an experience­d replacemen­t when Rado Cierzniak headed home to Poland in the summer, Zwick had been thrust into top-team action arguably before he was ready.

Thirteen games in, with United struggling at the bottom of the Premiershi­p, new manager Mixu Paatelaine­n decided he had to take the 21-year-old out of the firing line.

First he was replaced by Pole Michael Szromnik and then, from the turn of the year, Japanese internatio­nal Eiji Kawashima.

Zwick did return for a couple of games towards the end of the campaign and performed well in victories over Ross County and Kilmarnock.

Even so, it had to go down as a difficult first year as a first-team squad player.

This time round, Zwick’s involvemen­t has usually been via a seat on the bench as back-up to summer signing Cammy Bell.

To date he’s been used in three Irn-Bru Cup ties and when an injury forced Bell off at half-time down at Queen of the South the other week.

Each time, though, the Berliner has turned in assured performanc­es that have shown why United decided to bring him over the North Sea back in 2014.

And speak to a man, who at 22 still ranks as a very young goalie, and you get the sense of a much more confident player who’s ready to fight for a long future at Tannadice.

Against Dunfermlin­e in the Irn-Bru quarter-finals he chalked up a third clean sheet in four appearance­s and, while no one can dispute Bell remains very much first choice, showed the Tangerines have a keeper they can rely on if he’s called into action.

Quietly spoken and not one for blowing his own trumpet, it’s clear he not only believes that of himself but of all the other fringe men at Tannadice.

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