Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Utd, Dundee and Arbroath all have hopes of going up

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“I always keep an eye on my old clubs and how they are doing.

“I’m not sure if every player does but I have a soft spot for every club, especially Arbroath because they’re maybe not expected to be where they are. It’s great to see them doing so well.”

Murray’s time at Tannadice was up and down as United dropped through the relegation trapdoor in his first campaign before missing out on an immediate return at the last hurdle the following season.

Murray scored 25 goals across those two campaigns but admits the 1-0 play-off final defeat to top-flight Hamilton Accies was the toughest moment of his career.

“When I left for Hibs, United were so close to going up,” he added.

“We’d had a decent season and were top at Christmas but couldn’t keep it going and lost in the play-off final.

“We always thought if we got the penalty in the first leg where I was brought down but sent off for diving – I got volleyed in the leg – we could have gone to Hamilton and sat behind the ball and got the result.

“That was the hardest day in my football career.”

The Tangerines’ time in the Championsh­ip doldrums is almost certainly at an end as they sit well clear at the top of the table with eight matches remaining.

What happens after the coronaviru­s shutdown is still up in the air but Murray reckons the break might have come at a good time after just one win in their last nine matches.

“They might be quite glad to have a stoppage because they’d had a sticky patch.

“I think they were maybe too good in the first half of the season and took their foot off the gas, they were cruising at one point.

“They are still far enough ahead that no one will catch them and it will be good to see them back up. “The fans definitely deserve that.” And the 28-year-old wants to see another of his former clubs join them at the top table, hopefully after an expansion to the current league set-up once this hiatus comes to an end.

“Dundee will be a bit gutted because they’ve been on a really good run and made good signings in January but then this happened.

“I do think the city of Dundee needs its two teams in the top league again and I’m really hopeful that can happen soon.”

On league reconstruc­tion, he added: “Sixteen teams would be good and it would be good to see the top league expanded.

“By the time the season is finished in the Premiershi­p you know what aftershave each defender has on, you’ve played them that many times.

“You can play five, six times a season and it’s hard enough going to Celtic Park just once!

“I’d like to see some league reconstruc­tion and also something done with the play-offs, have the top team play fourth in one semi and second against third in the other.”

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