The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Red-hot contenders for player of the year gong

- BY ALAN TEMPLE

Dundee United’s player of the year awards will soon return. The ceremony was shelved last term after United suffered an ignominiou­s relegation to the Championsh­ip.

Rather understand­ably, no one of a United persuasion felt much like celebratin­g and dishing out gongs in the aftermath of a horror campaign across the board.

However, with the Tangerines on the cusp of an immediate return to the Premiershi­p, the event has been scheduled for May 5 and, barring an inconceiva­ble collapse, it will be a more festive affair.

Below, Courier Sport analyses who is likely to be in the running for the top prize at Dundee’s Apex Hotel.

CRAIG SIBBALD

If United had gone ahead with their awards night last year – and heaven knows they were right not to – then Sibbald would surely have claimed the recognitio­n; one man attempting to hold together an imbalanced, ineffectiv­e midfield.

Only Aziz Behich and Steven Fletcher would have been in the conversati­on, but it is hard to make a case that either were better than the former Falkirk and Livingston man.

And Sibbald has arguably been United’s most consistent performer this term, too.

His engine room partnershi­p with Ross Docherty – whose time spent on the sidelines is the only reason he is not cited among these contenders – has been the best in the Championsh­ip by a considerab­le distance.

When they play together, United’s league win percentage stands at 74%.

Sibbald has racked up six goal contributi­ons, scoring four times and teeing up another two.

During Docherty’s frustratin­g period battling calf, groin and hamstring niggles, Sibbald has remained solid, and adapted his game at times, while alongside the likes of Declan Glass and Jordan Tillson.

With an option to extend his contract beyond its summer expiry due to the number of games he has played this season, it will surely suit all parties for him to stick around.

LOUIS MOULT

“I think I have proved this season that there’s plenty of life left in the old dog.”

Those were the words of Louis Moult on March 25, fresh from scoring a staggering effort from the halfway line against Inverness – a strike that could very well be awarded goal of the season for its technique and audacity.

Moult is currently enjoying a red-hot streak of 11 goals in 15 games, taking his tally to 19 for the campaign.

Should he find the net once in United’s final three fixtures, then the exmotherwe­ll hero will hit the 20-mark for the first time in his career – a wonderful achievemen­t given his injury woes of recent years.

Quite aside from his wellestabl­ished finishing prowess, Moult’s link-up play has been superb, dovetailin­g brilliantl­y with Tony Watt and wingers Kai Fotheringh­am and Glenn Middleton.

KEVIN HOLT

Back on October 24, Declan Gallagher quipped: “I’ve never seen a guy win player of the year in October in my life – but Kevin Holt is giving that a good run.”

That came after Holt had become the first United centre-back in history to score a competitiv­e hattrick, putting Partick Thistle to the sword.

Allied with a rock-solid partnershi­p with Gallagher, the former Dundee and Queen of the South defender was a revelation during the first part of the campaign.

Recency bias can be a natural factor when assessing the standout performers, but Holt’s efforts should not be discounted despite a couple of wobbles in 2024 and the fact injury has ended his season prematurel­y.

In his first 11 Championsh­ip games, he contribute­d to seven clean sheets. For a period, United boasted the best defence in British league football, and had one of the best away records in Europe.

Combined with his penchant for an important goal – he is the Tangerines’ fourth most prolific scorer with eight – Holt deserves to be in the conversati­on.

KAI FOTHERINGH­AM

If an attacker’s job is all about output, then Kai Fotheringh­am cannot be ignored.

With an uncanny knack of being in the right place at the right time, the Tannadice academy graduate has scored 14 times and teed up another seven strikes this season.

Twenty-one goal contributi­ons in 38 appearance­s – in what, it should be remembered, is Fotheringh­am’s first full season as a bona fide United first-team regular – is a wonderful tally.

By his own admission, Fotheringh­am could affect games on a more consistent basis; be more involved during lulls.

As such, he is more likely to be named young player of the year (indeed, he would seem a shoo-in for that award).

 ?? ?? NET BUSTER: United’s Kai Fotheringh­am, who has hit 14 goals this season, celebrates a strike against Queen’s Park.
NET BUSTER: United’s Kai Fotheringh­am, who has hit 14 goals this season, celebrates a strike against Queen’s Park.

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