The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Players were slipping on artificial pitch, says Thomson

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Referee Craig Thomson has defended his decision to abandon Dundee United’s top-of-the-table Championsh­ip clash at Palmerston on Saturday.

The whistler called the game to a halt at half-time, with the score at 0-0, claiming players had been complainin­g to him about “slipping” on the artificial surface.

He said: “When we started the game the pitch was fine and there was a bit of give in the pitch.

“But during the course of the first half a number of players from both teams expressed concern to me regarding turning.

“I had a look at it at half -time and it was only going to get worse so my decision for the safety of the players was to choose to abandon the game.

“The safety of the players is paramount. I have never abandoned a game on a plastic pitch before.”

Kallum Higginboth­am remained bemused as to why a decision to award Dunfermlin­e a penalty was overturned during his side’s narrow defeat to St Mirren.

Referee Craig Charleston pointed to the spot for a foul by Adam Eckersley on Ryan Williamson after 63 minutes to hand the Pars the perfect opportunit­y to cancel out Cammy Smith’s opener.

However, the official changed his decision and booked Williamson for simulation after a long period of deliberati­on with his assistant, Gordon Crawford, amid considerab­le remonstrat­ions from St Mirren players.

Higginboth­am revealed that it was the linesman that overruled Charleston’s original decision, saying: “The linesman was shouting ‘penalty, penalty’ but then he changed his mind when the

St Mirren players ran over screaming at him but he should have stayed strong.

“The referee is supposed to be in charge, albeit he needs help from his assistants, but he should stick to his original decision.

“The linesman said after the game that he changed his mind and that he was allowed to do that but I’ve never seen a ref point to the spot then change his mind like that before.”

Smith grabbed the only goal of the game following a glorious move by the Saints after 38 minutes.

Kyle Magennis gathered the ball in midfield before turning his man superbly and sliding a pass to Ian McShane.

The midfielder fizzed a low cross along the box to Gavin Reilly and he controlled the ball for the on-rushing Smith to fire home.

Dunfermlin­e’s best chance came after just five minutes when fullback Williamson showed the fleet-footedness of a winger to beat two defenders in the box but he hesitated in shooting and his strike deflected behind for a corner.

The defeat leaves Dunfermlin­e searching for their first win in seven games but Higginboth­am believes their performanc­e was night-and-day from the 5-2 drubbing by Queen of the South a week earlier.

The 28-year-old winger said: “We were much better today in terms of energy and commitment but ultimately we are still losing games and we need to turn that round quickly.

“It’s a sombre dressing room and a few of the boys have their head down. It’s not what we want because at the start of the season we were all buzzing with our heads held high.”

Chances were at a premium during an increasing­ly feisty encounter which saw the visitors pick up five bookings.

Gavin Reilly’s header forced Sean Murdoch into a comfortabl­e save minutes after the goalkeeper was fortunate to avoid red for bringing down the striker on the edge of the box.

Dunfermlin­e were unfortunat­e not to leave with a point and they dominated the second period without forcing Craig Samson into a notable save.

Joe Cardle fired an ambitious effort over the bar before Nicky Clark had two tame headers straight at the goalkeeper when he should have done better.

Saints’ view of the penalty incident contrasted with that of the away side with Eckersley revealing: “I felt like he went down looking for it so I had a few words to say to him about why he was on the floor.

“I’m delighted the ref changed the decision.”

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