Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Long week leaves gaps to be filled

- BY TOM DUTHIE

AS the old saying goes, seven days is a long time in football. Glance at what’s happened to the Dundee United line-up from the last day of the season just over a week ago and you might want to call it an eternity.

Nine days on from the narrow failure to secure a Premiershi­p return at the first time of asking and it’s been confirmed almost half the starting XI have left the club.

Gone are full-backs Sean Dillon and Paul Dixon, while the three most attacking players, Simon Murray, Tony Andreu and Thomas Mikkelsen, have also packed their bags.

And yesterday afternoon midfielder Charlie Telfer joined them in heading for the exit.

For Andreu and Mikkelsen it’s been a case of returning to parent clubs from whom they’d been on loan. Of the others, Murray has opted for a return to the Premiershi­p with Hibs, Dillon is seeking pastures new after not being offered a deal, while talks with Dixon ended swiftly, if amicably, when he decided at 30 he was keen on one final challenge.

In the days to come, that list of departures could, conceivabl­y rise by another three, though the more likely number could be just two.

While Willo Flood has not signed a deal, despite interest from Motherwell, he looks likely to remain.

That leaves us awaiting news of Blair Spittal, who has been speaking to other clubs over the past week or so.

Add the departures of keeper Luis Zwick and winger Alex Nicholls, both of whom were on the bench against Accies, and to say Ray McKinnon has a lot of signing to do before next month’s League Cup ties, is more than a statement of the obvious.

Of course, he’s not been sitting back and doing nothing. Even before the season ended he’d fixed up James Keatings from Hibs and Billy King from Hearts and for a while now has been working on a list of targets.

What, though, is likely to be on it? The simple answer is lots — but looking at the situation in more detail

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom