The Herald on Sunday

McIntyre counts cost of his casualties

Ross County St Johnstone

- By Alasdair Fraser

IT IS fair to say Jim McIntyre has had better days. Ross County lost two players – Craig Curran and Andrew Davies – to calf injuries before a ball was kicked. They then saw Northern Ireland internatio­nal Liam Boyce hobble off with a medial ligament knee injury.

With Dutch forward Alex Schalk already sidelined, McIntyre may be left with just one fit frontman – 18-year-old Greg Morrison, who earned his first start – after the internatio­nal break.

But it was the slump in form and the recent pattern of timidity in front of goal that will occupy the County manager’s thoughts over the rest period. St Johnstone, in stark contrast, emerged from the match in fine fettle and right in the thick of European places.

McIntyre was in no mood to make excuses for his team, branding County’s first-half display their worst 45 minutes of the season after a Danny Swanson penalty and fine Chris Kane finish sank the hosts.

With just one goal scored in the last five games, McIntyre admitted: “We’re going through a patch just now where we’ve not created much. We need to get back to making better decisions and taking more responsibi­lity to do our own jobs. the battle for

“The first-half performanc­e was our worst of the season. We didn’t play with any energy or tempo Whether losing two guys to injury beforehand had an effect on the players’ minds, I don’t know, but that should never be the case.

“Liam Boyce has hurt his medial ligament. We’ll know more come Monday.

“Andrew Davies pulled up with a calf injury at the start of the warm-up. Again, we’ll assess that. Craig Curran reported injured before the game.

“The only bonus to both those injuries is we have an extra week, but again going into the internatio­nal break on a defeat makes it a long couple of weeks.”

After relentless first-half pressure, the away team’s breakthrou­gh came three minutes before the break. McEveley was adjudged to have tripped Kane, with the striker going nowhere in the box, and the County defender claiming he couldn’t get out of the striker’s way.

Swanson stepped up and found the bottom-right corner of the net, sending Fox the wrong direction.

Judging by the way they reemerged at half-time, County had taken verbals from manager Jim McIntyre at the break. They were on the front foot from the off, squeezing Saints back, but time and again it came to nothing.

Liam Boyce headed a good chance wide, while McEveley saw a strong header tipped over by Zander Clark.

County’s attacking exertions left them vulnerable at the back, though, and they were caught by a classic sucker punch after 73 minutes.

A sweeping Saints break ended with substitute David Wotherspoo­n threading Kane into space and the Saints striker calmly stroked the ball past Fox as the keeper tried to shut him down.

Boyce exited injured leaving County to play with 10 men through the final minutes, and Saints were never in danger.

“I think it was comfortabl­e,” Tommy Wright, the Perth team’s manager, said. “But to make it comfortabl­e you have to play well – and we played extremely well today.

“For the second goal, I think Chris Kane deserved it. He’s been very unlucky in front of goal and has worked very hard for the team.

“It’s a great finish from him – he’s calm and collected – and he puts it low past the keeper. I’m really pleased for him.”

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