The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

United’ s new gaffer needs to excite fans

- Jim Spence

Tam Courts never really won the hearts of Dundee United fans. His replacemen­t – and the smart money’s still on Jack Ross – will only win their affections by playing a more exciting brand of football.

Courts’ achievemen­ts in just one season are considerab­le, but supporters want to be entertaine­d. They want the wow factor when watching their team.

United have now been through three managers since Mark Ogren bought the club in December 2018 which, on the face of it, isn’t a recipe for stability, but each boss achieved their objectives.

Promotion under Robbie Neilson, Premiershi­p consolidat­ion under Micky Mellon and fourth place and European qualificat­ion under Courts.

United’s management model with a sporting director means any coach needs to buy into the fact that such a structure defines limits to their power.

Coaching, organisati­on, team selection and tactics are all in the remit but the days of a Jim McLean or a Sir Alex Ferguson, with absolute control of a club, are long gone. Those two would decide who was signed, who was sold and for how much. That world is ancient history.

Courts was part of a system which prizes developmen­t of youth. That’s because in order to become self-sustaining, clubs of Dundee United’s size need to rear their own and sell them at sufficient profit to keep the show on the road.

Mark Ogren has admitted he can’t continue to fund the club indefinite­ly and,

indeed, at Scottish level, I can think of no owner who could.

The Tannadice set-up seems a model for others to follow, with 17 players coming through the academy to pull on a firstteam shirt last season.

However, the true test of the success of a youth system has to be twofold.

The role of a profession­al football club isn’t simply to allow youngsters to fulfil a dream of playing the game for a living. They have to bring something substantia­l to the table.

Numbers alone making the first team are

insufficie­nt evidence of success. That takes time to weigh up correctly.

The best measure is longevity of those coming through in terms of their length of stay in the first team and the level of income raised from those who are sold on

Courts played his part in a season of achievemen­t.

He is a modern, ambitious coach, about to broaden his horizons with Honved in Hungary, but his move is perhaps also a sign that he wanted more say in his role while those above him were very cognisant of supporters’ desire for a

more stimulatin­g brand of football.

In recent times, I detected someone who’d gone from being thankful to have landed a prestigiou­s role at Scotland’s sixth biggest club, to someone realising how much he’d achieved and deciding that he was due more credit than he was getting.

Most United fans I know are ambivalent about his departure.

They’re just keen to get a new coach in and see some new signings to provide the thrills that they felt were missing during Courts’ reign.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? DRIVING THE COACH: Mark Ogren wants to take the club forward.
DRIVING THE COACH: Mark Ogren wants to take the club forward.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom