The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Strachan’s comments don’t read well now

- COMMENT ERIC NICOLSON

As always in football, you can come at the news 12 Dundee academy coaches will be working for nothing for the foreseeabl­e future and four of them will be leaving for good from two very different directions.

The club’s technical director, Gordon Strachan, made the Dark Blues an easy target with a careless choice of words back in May.

We were well into coronaviru­s season by the time he spouted the “If you want to be a profession­al club, show it” soundbite. He should have known there was a possibilit­y of cost-cutting at Dens.

“Don’t tell me you’re a profession­al club when you’re paying people part-time 80 quid a week” doesn’t read too well this morning when Dundee are now paying some qualified coaches absolutely nothing.

Combined with the vision of the owners to ingrain developing local talent into the club ethos, Strachan’s podcast sermon doesn’t sit very comfortabl­y with the harsh reality of the here and now.

Dundee are basically having to muddle through.

But they are doing so with all their teams intact; with a former Celtic and Scotland manager to guide them; with an academy head, Stephen Wright, who is highly-respected in the game; with a promising batch of footballer­s (at the early agegroups in particular) and with committed and talented coaches still on the staff.

Muddle through they will – nobody is better at it – and if they navigate these next few months, no long-term damage will be done.

If the youth developmen­t belttighte­ning requires another notch to be found, however, Dundee will be drifting far away from the type of “profession­al club” Strachan wants to see take Scottish football to a better place.

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