The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Gifted goals leave Wright unhappy

Kilmarnock climb to fifth with comfortabl­e victory

- Neil robertson at rugby park

St Johnstone boss Tommy Wright admitted he was disappoint­ed with the nature of the goals his side conceded following a desperatel­y disappoint­ing 2-0 defeat against Kilmarnock at Rugby Park last night, writes Neil Robertson.

Kris Boyd opened the scoring for the home side in the first half from the penalty spot. Saints were then reduced to 10 men before the break when Jason Kerr was given his marching orders by referee Willie Collum.

Lee Erwin doubled Killie’s advantage in the second half and Steve Clarke’s outfit comfortabl­y saw out the rest of the game.

Wright said: “The first goal kills us. “We then made a mistake, gave the ball away cheaply and went down to 10 men.

“But it is the same old story, we have helped the opposition in terms of scoring goals and we have done that again tonight.

“Even the second goal, we got done too easily. Irrespecti­ve if we were down to 10 men it was far too easy.

“As for the penalty, it doesn’t really matter what I think as he has given it.”

Rugby Park has been the proverbial fortress for Kilmarnock recently and it certainly proved to be an impregnabl­e venue for St Johnstone as they slumped to a disappoint­ing defeat.

Kris Boyd opened the scoring for the home side in the first half, with Tommy Wright’s side being reduced to 10 men before the break when Jason Kerr was sent for an early bath by referee Willie Collum.

Lee Erwin doubled the home side’s advantage 13 minutes after the restart and Killie comfortabl­y saw out the rest of the game.

Wright made three changes from the side that was beaten 4-1 by Rangers at Mcdiarmid Park last week, with Scott Tanser, Chris Millar and David Wotherspoo­n coming in for Steven Anderson – who dropped out altogether – Liam Craig and Matt Willock.

As ever with a game played on an artificial surface, there was no place in the St Johnstone squad for Steven Maclean.

Killie manager Steve Clarke picked a familiar-looking line-up including 34-year-old veteran striker Boyd, who, prior to kick-off, already had 17 goals to his name this season. And the front man came close to making it a dream start for the home side with just 30 seconds on the clock.

Aaron Tshibola sent a cross in from the left towards Boyd lurking at the St Johnstone back post and the former Scotland man was just inches away from connecting for what would have been a tap in.

Saints had an early half-chance of their own when Blair Alston tried his luck with a shot from the edge of the Killie box but it flew well over keeper Jamie Macdonald’s bar.

Killie’s Jordan Jones then embarked on a mazy run from just inside the Saints half before hitting a 20-yard strike but it was straight at Alan Mannus who made a comfortabl­e save.

St Johnstone were presented with a decent opportunit­y in the 15th minute when Chris Kane was fouled on the edge of the home penalty area but Wotherspoo­n hit his central free-kick straight at the defensive wall.

Shortly after, Jones pounced on a loose Saints pass before playing in Boyd, with the striker flashing a 22-yard shot just wide of Mannus’s left-hand post.

However, Boyd made no mistake in the 30th minute from the penalty spot.

Winger Jones was brought down by Aaron Comrie in the Saints box with referee Collum having no hesitation in awarding a spot kick. Boyd stepped up and emphatical­ly blasted the penalty past the helpless Mannus to give Killie the lead.

Tempers were threatenin­g to boil over with Wright spoken to by Collum after Comrie was booked for another foul.

St Johnstone’s task then became immeasurab­ly harder when they were reduced to 10 men in the 42nd minute. Jones raced through on goal and was brought down by Kerr with Collum deciding to flash a straight red card.

Boyd hit the resultant free-kick just wide before Mannus produced an outstandin­g diving save from Jones.

The home side had a Tshibola “goal” chalked off in first-half stoppage time with Saints no doubt glad to head down the tunnel just one goal in arrears.

Just seconds after the restart, Boyd again came close with a header that flashed just wide of Mannus’s left-hand post with Killie looking keen to give themselves a two-goal cushion as soon as possible.

They did come close to doing exactly that in the 56th minute. Alan Power had a shot blocked and the ball fell to Erwin who blasted wide when he should have at least hit the target.

However, the striker certainly made amends just two minutes later when he cut in from the right before despatchin­g an unstoppabl­e low shot past the despairing dive of Mannus and into the back of the net.

Saints were well and truly on the ropes and came close to conceding a third when Jones shot just wide.

There was then a lull in the game with Killie looking like they had decided their work was done for the night and all three points were wrapped up, while Wright’s men struggled to make any impact.

Clarke withdrew Boyd and Jones with both receiving standing ovations.

One of the subs, Eamon Brophy, tried his luck with a snap-shot in the 82nd minute but it was well off target.

Erwin then teed up Stephen O’donnell but Mannus came to the rescue to keep out his close-range shot.

Attendance: 3,807.

Kilmarnock: Macdonald, O’donnell, Findlay, Broadfoot, Taylor (Simpson 84), Power, Dicker, Tshibola, Jones (Frizell 79), Erwin, K Boyd (Brophy 68). Subs not used: Fasan, Mckenzie, Wilson, S Boyd.

St Johnstone: Mannus, Tanser, Alston, Shaughness­y, Millar (Mcclean 67), Davidson, Wotherspoo­n, Williams (Johnstone 45), Comrie, Kerr, Kane (Gordon 42). Subs not used: Clark, Craig, Willock, Mccann.

Referee: Willie Collum.

Twitter: @C_nrobertson

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 ??  ?? Tommy Wright: bad night for the Saints boss, who was spoken to by referee Willie Collum for his protests.
Tommy Wright: bad night for the Saints boss, who was spoken to by referee Willie Collum for his protests.
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 ?? Pictures: SNS Group. ?? Above, from far left: Jordan Jones goes down under the challenge of Aaron Comrie for Kilmarnock’s penalty; Jones goes down again and this time it’s a red card for Jason Kerr; Kris Boyd turns to celebrate after netting the penalty kick for his 18th goal...
Pictures: SNS Group. Above, from far left: Jordan Jones goes down under the challenge of Aaron Comrie for Kilmarnock’s penalty; Jones goes down again and this time it’s a red card for Jason Kerr; Kris Boyd turns to celebrate after netting the penalty kick for his 18th goal...
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