The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Bollan and Guardiola – see Talking Football on

Our writers turn their attention this week to bad days at the office, missed opportunit­ies, crowd figures and Sky Blue galacticos – of the Station Park variety

- with Eric Nicolson and Ian Roache

Q Dundee manager Paul Hartley admitted the team had a “bad day at the office” up in Inverness. Can they avoid having another one when Celtic visit on Saturday?

IR: Hartley’s summing-up was probably as full and frank as you can expect from a manager and that is to his credit. Dundee have managed to get a timely win in the past to ease any pressure on them but a match against the Hoops is the last fixture you would choose under the circumstan­ces.

EN: I can’t see Dundee getting anything from the game but I’d be saying the same about any other team in Scotland just now.

Q After the Hoops come calling, the Dens men are away to Hearts and then head to McDiarmid Park. That’s a heck of a set of fixtures, is it not?

IR: It is indeed. The problem when you don’t beat the likes of Hamilton and Kilmarnock at home when you play them is that you then go into these games with some trepidatio­n.

EN: I certainly wouldn’t be writing those two games off. Dundee would and should expect to give Hearts and Saints a run for their money. Dundee are on a bad run, and in these circumstan­ces every game can seem like a tough one. But my opinion of where they will finish hasn’t changed. In old money it would be mid-table, but these days it’s the top half of the bottom six.

Q St Johnstone missed out on second spot in the Premiershi­p by only drawing at Hamilton. However, that doesn’t look too shoddy a result, does it?

IR: Actually, it might turn out to be a valuable point. While Saints didn’t quite bounce back in style from their last-gasp Betfred Cup loss at Aberdeen it was still a pretty decent display and result.

EN: That was my weekend game to cover and I thought Saints were very good in the second half, after an even first period. It had the look of one of those matches where it just wasn’t going to happen, though. And there’s no doubt that Steven MacLean was missed. Ian’s reflecting Tommy Wright’s own thoughts – any away point in the Premiershi­p is a decent one. Saints fans can expect their team to continue keeping company with Hearts and Aberdeen.

Q Four out of five Championsh­ip matches had larger attendance­s than the 1,702 at the Accies v Saints match, with the exception – Raith Rovers v Dumbarton – just 69 fewer. Is that an argument for expanding the top flight or doesn’t it matter? IR: Accies have never pulled in the punters and it was a Sunday afternoon game that followed Aberdeen v Rangers on TV. It was also played in pretty

miserable weather conditions. In an ideal world the stands would be packed but it is what it is.

EN: There were 400-odd Saints fans there. There’s nothing wrong with that. And it isn’t as if numbers have suddenly dropped as far as Accies fans are concerned. But, on the wider point, yes, I would like to see a 16-team top league.

Q Dundee United, by their own admission, won ugly against Morton at the weekend. Do you fancy them to grind out another victory against Hibs at Easter Road on Sunday?

IR: It might be a bit of a cliche but the Morton match really was all about the result. United have played better and lost this season but this stuffy victory will still have built confidence and they have players capable of going to Easter Road and winning.

EN: Two points off Hibs certainly sounds a lot better than eight. Hibs have lost a bit of momentum so this could be a good time for United to play them. If I was Ray McKinnon I’d be happy with a draw though. United’s inconsiste­ncy is understand­able but it makes me reluctant to predict anything better than a point for them though.

Q Ray McKinnon was forced into yet more personnel and positional changes at the weekend. Is it fair to say he has been unfortunat­e in not being able to field his ideal line-up on a consistent basis?

IR: The United boss has been offered chances, by myself and others, to use his selection difficulti­es as an excuse this season and not taken them. They have hampered him, though. Saturday saw the most interestin­g change yet, with Lewis Toshney in

a deep midfield role and Frank van der Struijk switching to right back. I expect that one to stay for the Hibs clash.

EN: Injuries and a lot of new signings has certainly made life harder for McKinnon to decide what his best team is let alone be able to pick it. Until he gets to that point it will probably continue to be an up and down season.

Q What do Gary Bollan and Pep Guardiola have in common (clue: look at the league tables)?

IR: We’ll need to start calling the Forfar gaffer El Bollano! Of course, we are referring to the magnificen­t 100% starts made in the league by both the Sky Blue galacticos and some other team that also wear blue and play at the Etihad. It’s a fantastic achievemen­t for Bollan his boys.

EN: Saturday’s win at Clyde was probably the most significan­t one so far given it was against a strong Clyde side who were also in form. An eight-point gap after seven games is impressive by anybody’s standards. Forfar are going to be in fine fettle for their Battle of Britain against the Welsh league leaders in a couple of weeks.

Q Can Celtic get near the aforementi­oned Manchester City in the Champions League this week or are we looking at another Nou Camp-style scoreline?

IR: I fear this will be another sore one for Scottish football as we realise once again how far our champions are behind the giants of the big leagues.

EN: Celtic are a totally different propositio­n at home than they are away in Europe. It won’t be a 7-0, or anything like it, but it will be a City win.

“An eightpoint gap after seven games is impressive by anybody’s standards

 ?? Pictures: SNS ?? Above: dejected Dundee duo Danny Williams and Julen Etxabegure­n at full time at Inverness; opposite page, clockwise from top: Steven MacLean, who was missed in Sunday’s draw with Hamilton, in action against Aberdeen; Forfar boss Gary Bollan, one of...
Pictures: SNS Above: dejected Dundee duo Danny Williams and Julen Etxabegure­n at full time at Inverness; opposite page, clockwise from top: Steven MacLean, who was missed in Sunday’s draw with Hamilton, in action against Aberdeen; Forfar boss Gary Bollan, one of...
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