Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Utd success to defensive

- By TOM DUTHIE

STATISTICS are useful but they can be misleading. Right now, there may be no better example of that than those surroundin­g Dundee United’s rise in the Championsh­ip.

Look only at t he stats of t he Tangerines’ recent f orm and the conclusion would be this is a team whose success is based almost entirely on defensive strength.

Despite playing the last half-hour at Raith Rovers on Saturday with 10 men, United defended comfortabl­y without conceding to record a sixth clean sheet on the bounce.

Add to that the second half of their victory at Queen of the South early last month and it is now an impressive 585 minutes since an opposition effort has had to be chalked up in the goals-against column.

At the same time, that run has not included too many goals-for.

Since blasting four past the Doonhamers that November day, Ray McKinnon’s men have only troubled the scoresheet on four occasions.

Simon Murray grabbed a late winner as constant pressure was finally turned into a goal against Dunfermlin­e in the first game of the no-goals-against run.

The following weekend again saw the Pars faced, this time in the Challenge Cup, and Mark Durnan popped up to grab the only counter.

After a goalless draw at Morton, the top-of-the-table clash with Hibs was decided by a Tony Andreu penalty.

And the following week saw Tope Obadeyi’s early effort decide the outcome of the clash with Ayr United.

That does point to the defence being responsibl­e for the lofty league position, a view that’s strengthen­ed if you go beyond the recent run of perfection.

Astonishin­gly, over the last 11 games just two goals have been conceded, making them among the most frugal anywhere.

But while it would be ridiculous to argue against the fact the work of the defenders has been the cornerston­e of the rapid rise up the league table, it would also be wrong not to recognise there is more to this team than just an ability to shut up shop.

While the goals-for have not been flowing of late, and as much as William Edjenguele, Cammy Bell and Co deserve huge credit for their work, the attacking players have made a contributi­on.

And not just through a work ethic that

 ??  ?? Dundee United boss Ray McKinnon is proving to be a master tactician. The 10-man Tangerines didn’t sit back and defend on Saturday against Raith
Dundee United boss Ray McKinnon is proving to be a master tactician. The 10-man Tangerines didn’t sit back and defend on Saturday against Raith

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