The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Pars chief springs to Grant’ s defence

- ALAN TEMPLE

Sporting director Thomas Meggle has leapt to the defence of embattled Dunfermlin­e boss Peter Grant, insisting even Jurgen Klopp would have struggled to overcome the challenges of recent weeks.

Former St Pauli player and coach Meggle is the football mind of the Fifers’ new owners, DAFC Fussball GmbH, and was firmly behind Grant’s appointmen­t during the summer.

However, Grant is already under mounting pressure following a winless start to the Championsh­ip campaign.

The visit of Inverness today already looks make-or-break.

While Meggle pointedly noted “Peter knows he is responsibl­e for the team performanc­e” and that Dunfermlin­e “should have the goal of finishing in the top four”, he did cite mitigating factors for the current “negative spiral”.

Dunfermlin­e were recently forced to forget their SPFL Trust Trophy encounter against Elgin City due to Covid cases, injuries and internatio­nal call-ups.

The Pars’ training pitch at Alloa’s Indodrill Stadium was a ghost town during that period.

And Meggle said: “How is he supposed to change things in the last couple of weeks when he is sometimes on the training pitch with only six players?

“How is he supposed to practise defensive behaviour with the team?

“In the last two weeks, I was shocked that a game had to be forfeited because of too few players.

“We had five players selfisolat­ing due to Covid, six injured players and two players were away with their national teams.

“I am proud to have national players in the Dunfermlin­e team, but in this particular situation it did not help us.

“The basis of success in football is training – if players cannot train, for whatever reason, it would be difficult even for (Jurgen) Klopp, (Thomas) Tuchel or (Hansi) Flick.”

Dunfermlin­e’s porous back-line has been a particular source of ire among the Pars faithful, with Grant’s charges shipping 16 goals in their last five competitiv­e fixtures.

Those outings have been peppered with mistakes and errant decision-making.

Meggle said: “In every game, a brutal individual mistake steers us in the wrong direction.

“That leads to a loss of self-confidence and belief in ourselves. In addition, we probably defend too carelessly and lose the ball in spaces where it is often deadly.

“The basis – the foundation of success in football is the defensive work – and the salt in the soup is the offensive.”

In a Q&A on Dunfermlin­e’s official website, Meggle reaffirmed the new owners’ intention to create a new youth academy and build a new training ground; major projects and cause for real optimism regarding the future.

But Meggle acknowledg­es that some supporters may feel disaffecte­d, rather than positive, when they take their seats at East End Park today.

He continued: “I can understand everyone who is dissatisfi­ed and articulate­s their dissatisfa­ction. They give time and money to watch games.

“They love this club and some of them have tattoos on their bodies that are meant to last forever.

“I can only ask every fan to support our players, but I also have to accept when they don’t do it.

“The team must focus on itself.

“They have to tolerate that they can only help themselves on the pitch by everyone fighting for everyone else.

“That brings me back to the theme, do your job for the team!”

 ?? ?? RALLYING CRY: Dunfermlin­e sporting director Thomas Meggle has backed Peter Grant, inset, to end winless run.
RALLYING CRY: Dunfermlin­e sporting director Thomas Meggle has backed Peter Grant, inset, to end winless run.

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