The Scotsman

St Johnstone 0 Aberdeen 1 /Dons’ season up and running thanks to Hedges

● Hedges comes off the bench to break deadlock as Aberdeen snatch the points

- Alan Pattullo At Mcdiarmid Park

Substitute Ryan Hedges grabbed the only goal as Aberdeen returned from their coronaviru­s shutdown with a late victory over St Johnstone in Perth.

The Dons were unsurprisi­ngly lacking a cutting edge amid an injury crisis up front and after eight players were forced to selfisolat­e following two positive Covid-19 tests.

But Hedges showed some much-needed enterprise three minutes after coming off the bench to cut in from the right and fire a low shot which deflected off a defender and wrong-footed goalkeeper Elliot Parish in the 82nd minute.

“In light of everything, the stop-start nature of our campaign, just getting up and running, it was all about getting that first win no matter how you get it,” Aberdeen manager Derek Mcinnes said.

Sir Alf Ramsey’s England were the wingless wonders. Derek Mcinnes’ Aberdeen took it to the other extreme.

He sent on Connor Mclennan and Matty Kennedy at half-time to increase his contingent of wingers to four – five if you included Jonny Hayes. No number of wide players playing in and out of position could hide the fact Mcinnes was trying to operate without an authentic striker due to injury but late substitute Ryan Hedges – yes, another winger – emerged as the matchwinne­r.

Aberdeen’s personnel problems were compounded by the Covid-19 related issues that had forced the original game between these sides to be postponed. Mcinnes’ side were far from wondrous it has to be said but then there were plenty of mitigating factors. They will treat this as a precious if rather ugly win after a challengin­g fortnight. Hedges’ winner after 82 minutes flew past an unsighted Elliott Parish having taken a nick off St Johnstone’s Liam Gordon.

Mcinnes had asked for his players to get the club’s season up and running after the attendant issues which caused three matches to be postponed.

Aberdeen began the process of catching up last night. They are already up to eighth from second bottom. Hedges was the perhaps unlikely hero though it was not surprising that yet another winger was responsibl­e for securing the three points. Hedges replaced Mcginn – winger for winger – after 79 minutes.

Two minutes in, he set off up the right following a lay-off from fellow substitute Craig Bryson. He then drove in from the right before unleashing a left footed shot that deflected into the net off Gordon. Aberdeen saw out the rest of the match fairly comfortabl­y against a shot-shy St Johnstone side.

Callum Davidson is clearly building something of note in Perth but their ambitions will be restricted by the absence of an out-and-out goalscorer.

After all the pre-match debate, it was Lewis Ferguson who occupied the centre-forward role for Aberdeen, whose personnel problems had accumulate­d in this particular area. Well, there is a nine in the No 19 shirt Ferguson wears. Mclennan took over from him in the second half.

Ferguson had done a decent job for the most part, but it was painfully apparent he was a central midfielder trying to make the best of things up front and he moved back to his preferred position at the start of the second half.

Niall Mcginn and Scott Wright were on either side of him in the first half. New signing Ross Mccrorie, who Mcinnes said he was looking forward to deploying in central midfield on the eve of the match, played on the right of a back three.

Discountin­g these positional quirks, it looked a reasonably strong Aberdeen side despite everything.

Hayes was the only one of the so-called Aberdeen eight to make the starting XI which says everything about his natural fitness and ability to get up and down the line. He had trained mostly by himself since making that ill-judged decision to attend a night out withsevent­eam-mates.fellow miscreants Dylan Mcgeouch, Bryson and Kennedy started on the bench.

Indeed, Davidson might have looked at the Aberdeen side with some amount of envy. He is delivering the attractive side he promised upon replacing Tommy Wright, but is hamstrung by a limited squad size. Neverthele­ss, there are some promising signs for the Perth side. In Danny Mcnamara, the on-loan wing back from Millwall, they have someone who is adept at catching the eye with his forward bursts.

One of these led to Joe Lewis pulling off the save of the first half after Mcnamara cut inside before testing the keeper from 20 yards. Lewis tipped the ball over. Mcginn had a rather weaker effort at the other end which Parish dealt with comfortabl­y. Aberdeen’s other chance came when Funso Ojo volleyed over from Hayes’ back post cross after Wright had carried the ball forward before spreading the play out to the left.

Given this scant number of attempts on goal in the opening 45 minutes, it was certainly not worth the wait of almost a fortnight for the game to take place. Things hardly improved in the second half either. Mcinnes brought on Mclennan and Kennedy, the former St Johnstone winger, for Ronnie Hernandez, who had been operating on the right of a midfield four, and Dean Campbell.

Ash Taylor and Tommie Hoban, playing his first match since February last year, both came close to connecting with Mcginn’s free kick from the left as the rain teemed down midway through the second half. Shortly afterwards Mcinnes made another change with Bryson replacing Ojo. St Johnstone sent on Craig Conway for Callum Hendry at the same time. Little was changing. Play was going from side to side but there was little incisivene­ss from either side.

Mcinnes’nextchange­proved a pivotal one. With his last goal having come in November, perhaps not everyone expected Hedges to emerge the matchwinne­r when he bumped elbows with Mcginn, whomherepl­acedwith11­minutes left. Another winger, he was able to bring some goal

menace as well. He still had plenty to do after Bryson gave him the ball and he drifted in from the right before shooting through a mass of players in the box. It might not have beaten Parish were it not for a deflection that Aberdeen will treat as some blessed fortune inatryingp­eriod.stjohnston­e will be within their rights to wonder what might have happened had the game been played when it was meant to take place, when Aberdeen had even fewer options. ST JOHNSTONE: Parish, Kerr, Gordon (Rooney 85), Mccart, Mcnamara (Robertson 85), Mccann, Craig, Tanser, Wotherspoo­n (Olaofe 76), O’halloran, Hendry (Conway 69). Subs not used: Duffy, Ballantyne, Sinclair.

ABERDEEN: Lewis, Mccrorie, Taylor, Hoban, Hernandez (Mclennan 46), Wright (Logan 84), Ojo (Bryson 69), Campbell (Kennedy 46), Hayes, Ferguson, Mcginn (Hedges 79). Subs not used: Ruth, Mcgeouch, Cerny, Mackenzie.

 ??  ?? 0 Aberdeen’s Ryan Hedges, centre, celebrates his match-winning goal against St Johnstone with new signing Ross Mccrorie, left.
0 Aberdeen’s Ryan Hedges, centre, celebrates his match-winning goal against St Johnstone with new signing Ross Mccrorie, left.
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 ??  ?? 0 St Johnstone’s Craig Conway battles with Jonny Hayes.
0 St Johnstone’s Craig Conway battles with Jonny Hayes.
 ??  ?? 0 Derek Mcinnes had a field day with his use of wingers.
0 Derek Mcinnes had a field day with his use of wingers.
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 ??  ?? 2 Ryan Hedges, one of a plethora of wingers utilised by Aberdeen last night, had only just been introduced as a substitute when he fired this shot into the St Johnstone net, with the aid of a deflection, to clinch a 1-0 victory for the Dons in the Scottish Premiershi­p at Mcdiarmid Park last night.
2 Ryan Hedges, one of a plethora of wingers utilised by Aberdeen last night, had only just been introduced as a substitute when he fired this shot into the St Johnstone net, with the aid of a deflection, to clinch a 1-0 victory for the Dons in the Scottish Premiershi­p at Mcdiarmid Park last night.

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