Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

United’s storm

- BY ALAN TEMPLE

DUNDEE United made hay at Hampden as the Tangerines continue to set the pace in the Championsh­ip.

A rampant United racked up a 5-0 triumph over Queen’s Park on Saturday to maintain their fourpoint advantage over Raith Rovers. Jim Goodwin’s men are potentiall­y four wins from the title.

Goals from Kai Fotheringh­am (2), Louis Moult, Ross Graham and Craig Sibbald did the damage, while the Terrors saw Moult miss a penalty and Fotheringh­am hit the bar. This could have been an even more consummate demolition.

United’s dominance was testament to their aggression and high press. They sought to get the ball forward early and push up, smothering the Spiders and playing the game entirely in the opposing half. It worked a treat.

Graham and Sam McClelland spent much of the contest on the half-way line, with United forcing myriad errors from Queen’s Park as the hosts attempted to play their way out of trouble.

The amount of times Callum Davidson’s side surrendere­d possession in dangerous areas – particular­ly in the first half – was staggering.

United took full advantage of Queen’s Park’s failings and, like their triumph over Raith seven days prior, played with a tempo, physicalit­y and intensity that their opponents could not match.

And the Tangerines added some stylish craft to that graft in the second half.

Graham, 23, visibly lapped up his towering header to make it 3-0, leaping for joy and roaring

in celebratio­n. It was the towering defender’s first goal since April 2022 against Hibernian.

At that point, his trajectory was soaring. Graham had made his senior bow, scored against Rangers at Tannadice and found the net on his Scotland U21 debut.

Since then, there have been numerous bumps in the road.

He struggled to cement a starting berth under Jack Ross and Liam Fox as the Tangerines crashed to relegation. While rated and valued by Goodwin, the partnershi­p of Declan Gallagher and Kevin Holt was immovable.

So, there was likely some catharsis

in that moment at Hampden. And it capped another splendid display by Graham – whose burgeoning partnershi­p with Sam McClelland appears to be an exceptiona­lly promising one – as he gets set to play a key part in the title charge.

When Fotheringh­am clinically dispatched his 10th Championsh­ip goal of the season to break the deadlock on Saturday, it marked a notable milestone.

Three United players have now reached double figures in the league this term, with Fotheringh­am joining Tony Watt (11) and Louis Moult (16). It is the first time that has happened since the Tangerines

were crowned champions of Scotland in 1982-83. On that occasion, Davie Dodds, Ralph Milne and Eamonn Bannon all topped 10 Premier Division goals.

Fotheringh­am’s tally is laudable for a youngster in his first campaign as a bona fide regular and, while there have been peaks and troughs – like any rookie – he has an uncanny knack of producing big moments.

Fotheringh­am would go on to make it a brace at Hampden, taking his Championsh­ip tally to 11 (14 in all competitio­ns).

With Kevin Holt (eight), Sibbald, Mathew Cudjoe and Glenn Middleton (all four) contribute­d to the attacking

cause, Goodwin can be satisfied by a team effort in the final third.

The formula for United is simple: win four Championsh­ip fixtures and they win the league.

That focus has remained consistent and, while Raith assistant Colin Cameron spoke of keeping the pressure on, the Fifers’ win over Ayr United didn’t get a post-match mention from anyone at United.

However, it is hard to shake the feeling this week could be a defining one; certainly, in terms of whether this title race will go all the way to the final Friday night on May 3.

Rovers host Airdrieoni­ans in their game in hand on Tuesday night and

that fixture appears increasing­ly a must-win.

Even a draw would see United retain a three-point lead and, due to a vastly superior goal difference of 31, the Terrors would still be in a position where they could afford to lose a game during the run-in.

Goodwin then takes his side to Morton on Friday night in what – along with the away trip to Airdrie – looks the toughest test on paper during the run-in.

Depending on how Rovers fare in midweek, a win at Cappielow could pile immense pressure on Raith by the time they take to the field against Partick Thistle on Saturday.

 ?? ?? Kai Fotheringh­am celebrates.
ALWAYS BELIEVE IN: Tony Watt salutes fellow striker Louis Moult after
Kai Fotheringh­am celebrates. ALWAYS BELIEVE IN: Tony Watt salutes fellow striker Louis Moult after
 ?? ?? the big No 9 had chipped Queen’s Park keeper Calum Ferrie to make it 2-0 to United on Saturday.
the big No 9 had chipped Queen’s Park keeper Calum Ferrie to make it 2-0 to United on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom