Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

County loss worse than 7-0 defeat

- BY TOM DUTHIE

LOSING seven goals in a game to Aberdeen last week was one of his worst experience­s as a profession­al footballer.

But Dundee skipper Darren O’Dea admits he felt even l ower after Tuesday’s 2-1 reversal at Ross County.

The experience­d defender’s logic is simple — when you don’t get what you should from a game, defeat is so much harder to take.

“It maybe sounds strange to say it but the defeat on Tuesday hurt a little bit more than the one against Aberdeen,” he said.

“You come off the pitch after a game like Friday deflated, of course you do, and we were all really down.

“But you know you deserved nothing from the game. We deserved the doing we got.

“In Dingwall we knew we deserved to take something and that’s why it hurts more.

“But for a contentiou­s decision right at the end we would have taken a point, so getting nothing was hard to take.”

He was referring to Mark O’Hara’s last-minute challenge on Michael Gardyne, Dundee felt was a fair one, but for which referee John Beaton pointed to the spot, leading to Liam Boyce’s dramatic winner.

What happened at the other end seconds later, and ended with Danny Williams being red-carded after a bust-up involving several players, only heightened O’Dea’s sense of injustice.

As well as putting that behind him, though, he is able to take a wider view and extract positives from the experience.

“Mark O’Hara gets booked for diving when we go up the pitch.

“I know some of the lads at Ross County and I was chatting to them at the end. They knew that was more of a penalty than the one they got for Mark’s challenge.

“As hard as that was to take, as an experience­d pro I can look at the bigger picture and see we stood up and weren’t hiding during the game.

“That’s very important for me because, listen, it is something we can take going forward and build on.

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