The Scotsman

Saints stay positive over survival after their ‘sore one’ in Inverness

- By ANGUS WRIGHT

St Johnstone captain Liam Gordon focused on the positives after their 2-2 draw at Inverness and vowed to go out and take control of the second leg.

Saints were utterly dominant for the majority of the cinch Premiershi­p play-off final first leg on Friday and goals from Shaun Rooney and Melker Hallberg had them two ahead inside 24 minutes.

But they squandered chances to hit Caley Thistle on the break and Billy Dodds’ side scored two late goals through Reece Mcalear, the second a sensationa­l free-kick.

St Johnstone’s top-flight status now depends on tonight’s one-off clash at Mcdiarmid Park but Gordon refused to be rocked by the late blow.

“I don’t really know how we didn’t [win] to be fair,” the defender said. “First 65 minutes, I thought we were brilliant then we concede the first goal.

“It’s obviously disappoint­ing looking back at it. Having seen the photo, the boy’s at least three yards offside. That’s in the second phase and there was a head knock before.

“It’s disappoint­ing to lose a goal in that fashion and then they score a worldie free-kick. Then it’s 2-2.

“But now it’s halfway, 2-2, all to play for in the second leg. If we can put in that performanc­e that we had and just be more clinical, then we should do well.

“There are plenty positives to take. I was saying to the boys

not to be too down. Obviously it’s a sore one, we didn’t want a draw after being two goals up, but that’s football.

“We dust ourselves down and we have a big performanc­e to come now on Monday.”

Inverness grew in belief as the game progressed and will take that into the second leg.

“Of course they will fancy their chances,” Gordon said. “They’re in the play-off final, I don’t see why they wouldn’t.

“But we fancy our chances as well. If we turn up the way

we can, we fancy ourselves as well.

“I thought we did a lot well but could have done better going forward. We have another chance to put it to bed and make amends.

“There is so much to play for, so much at stake. Boys can’t have their head down.

“We need to look at the positives of what we did in the first leg. There are plenty of them. We just need to do it again on Monday and be more clinical.”

Inverness defender Robbie

Deas feels maintainin­g the belief they finished with on Friday can carry them into the top flight, having already come from behind to beat Partick Thistle in the quarter-finals and defied the odds to get past Arbroath after going down to nine men.

Deas said: “We need that bit of luck but we go into Monday confident we can turn them over.

“We are on a good run and we never say never. We have had that attitude throughout

the season, come back a lot of times when we looked down and we proved that against a Premiershi­p side.

“I think we more than deserved to get the result on Friday night, albeit our start was nowhere near good enough. We weren’t keeping the ball, were losing it far too easily and we just weren’t set up.

“But in the second half we calmed down and showed what we can do. We just need to believe that on Monday.”

 ?? ?? 0 St Johnstone's Callum Hendry beats David Carson to the ball during the 2-2 draw in the Premiershi­p play-off final first leg
0 St Johnstone's Callum Hendry beats David Carson to the ball during the 2-2 draw in the Premiershi­p play-off final first leg

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