The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Neil Mccann’s Dundee team return to action against Rangers at the weekend – winless, pointless and bottom of the Premiershi­p after four games. Courier Sports writers Ian Roache and Eric Nicolson analyse the Dens Park manager’s track record and the scale o

- IAN ROACHE

These are the days of knee-jerk reactions, faux outrage and perception trumping reality.

Football has no right to escape the ills that permeate wider society.

We have to get to the truth.

So we ask ourselves: Is Neil Mccann’s record really that bad? Could the Dundee boss be a victim of a rush to judgment or do the facts support the views of those fans who want him out? The case needs some context. Mccann’s season thus far is best assessed in two chunks: Betfred Cup and Premiershi­p matches.

In the cup, he won three out of four group games to finish second in the section. The problem for him is that the defeat was at home to Championsh­ip side Dunfermlin­e and it could have been a lot worse than 1-0.

Then came the horror show against Ayr United at Dens in the second round, when his team lost two men and were hammered 3-0 by yet another team from a division below.

In the league they played well enough at St Mirren on opening day but still lost 2-1 and have since been beaten by Aberdeen, St Johnstone and Motherwell.

A key criticism of Mccann is, therefore, that his team have only bettered three lower league, part-time sides – Stirling, Peterhead and Brechin – and lost every time they faced a club from the Championsh­ip or above.

Let’s compare that to the start he made to last season.

The Dark Blues won their first three Betfred matches against Raith Rovers (a), Buckie Thistle (h) and Cowdenbeat­h (a).

Their final group game was at Dens against Championsh­ip side Dundee United in a city derby that was drawn after 90 minutes before they lost the penalty shoot-out to United to finish second in the group.

That, of course, mirrors what happened this season. Things would improve, however, in the second round when they dominated the rerun against United and finished worthy 2-1 winners.

The cup exit would come against Celtic in a 4-0 loss at home on September 20 – no disgrace there.

By then Mccann’s first full league season in charge had started badly with

Neil Mccann may not have suffered a 7-0 embarrassm­ent like Paul Hartley but he hasn’t exactly been short of terrible scorelines

a 2-1 home loss to Ross County, who would go on to be relegated.

The Dark Blues then lost 3-0 to Hamilton and 2-1 at Aberdeen before securing their first point with a 1-1 home draw against Hibs.

There would be a 4-1 loss at Rangers before the first Premiershi­p victory of the season was clinched – 3-2 at home to St Johnstone.

The date of the Saints match was September 16 so if Dundee don’t pull off an against-the-odds win at Ibrox in their next game this Saturday then datewise they will be deeper into this campaign than the last one without a league victory to their name.

Also worth noting when considerin­g Mccann’s record is the period between February 3 and April 7 of last season.

During this spell, which started with another home defeat to Ross County (4-1 this time), they only took five points out of a possible 27 in the league and crashed out of the Scottish Cup thanks to a Dens defeat by Motherwell.

His record during those barren two months was one win, two draws and seven defeats. The manager must have been grateful to Simon Murray, whose two late goals at Partick Thistle secured the solitary win of that period.

To put all that into context, let’s explore the records of his predecesso­rs.

Paul Hartley was sacked by the board after a run of seven successive defeats, culminatin­g in the 2-0 home loss to Hamilton on April 15, 2017.

The undoubted low point of that sequence was the 7-0 home humiliatio­n dished out by Aberdeen. Thankfully, Dundee haven’t sunk that low under Mccann.

Confirming Hartley’s departure,

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom