Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Talking points from Tannadice with return to top flight in the bag

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DUNDEE United can prepare for life in the Premiershi­p.

Chris Mochrie’s late strike secured a nerveshred­ding victory for the Tangerines against Ayr United on Saturday, with the academy graduate pouncing from close-range after a Tony Watt header was parried by Josh Clarke.

The narrow win sees United move six points clear of Raith Rovers with two games to play and a superior goal difference of 36.

Even if the “C” does not yet adorn their name on the standings, the job is done.

Charged with rebuilding from the ashes of a relegation – for which he cannot be entirely absolved – while cutting more than £2.5 mllion from the wage bill, boss Jim Goodwin has met his target in commendabl­e fashion.

And Tele Sport was at Tannadice to analyse the action as United all-but claimed the title.

CHRIS MOCHRIE Mochrie would be the first to admit he has not seen as much action as he would have liked this term.

But he has maximised his minutes.

When the story of United’s 2023-24 campaign is written, his contributi­on will be notable.

A last-minute winner against ICT; a lastminute winner against Dunfermlin­e; the goal that effectivel­y sealed promotion at Tannadice – he has single-handedly turned three points into nine for United.

Still only 20 years of age, Mochrie will boast successive league winners’ medals, adding the Championsh­ip title to his League One crown while on loan with the Pars last season.

And for a Dundee boy to emerge as the hero on Saturday: the perfect script.

His fellow substitute David Wotherspoo­n deserves to be spotlighte­d.

The St Johnstone legend changed the game after replacing Jordan Tillson, picking up intelligen­t pockets of space, dribbling forward in possession and, crucially, delivering the cross that led to Mochrie’s goal.

FOUR IN A ROW

The mark of champions is finding form and consistenc­y when it really matters. Stepping up at the business end of the season.

The Tangerines have done that laudably.

Goodwin’s men have pieced together a fourgame winning run, scoring 13 goals in the process, and keeping three clean sheets.

The triumph over Raith Rovers was defining, the 5-0 and 4-1 demolition­s of Queen’s Park and Morton were comprehens­ive, and Saturday’s encounter with the Honest Men was nervy but, ultimately, satisfying.

This is their longest streak of consecutiv­e victories this campaign – achieved exactly when required.

CAN UNITED BECOME RECORD BREAKERS? This weekend marked United’s 18th clean sheet in the league.

They have shut out their opponents in more than 50% of Championsh­ip fixtures and conceded just 22 goals in 34 games.

Should the Tangerines keep Airdrieoni­ans and Partick Thistle at bay in their next two games, they will register the best defensive record in the second tier since it restructur­ed to a 36-game season in 1994-95.

St Johnstone, with 23 goals conceded (1996-97), are the team to beat.

United have flexed their attacking muscles on plenty of occasions, but their successes have been built upon a stoic, organised structure and, after the occasional­ly farcical travails of last season, what a contrast. PLANNING FOR THE

FUTURE

United will attack the Premiershi­p with ambition. That much is clear. No sooner had the Terrors sealed the title (in fact, they haven’t officially done so yet), than Goodwin was eyeing a place in the top-six for the Tangerines – speaking with drive and determinat­ion.

The joy of effectivel­y winning the league with weeks to spare, is United can begin their preparatio­ns in earnest.

There is a swathe of Tannadice players out of contract in June and, while the club will no doubt seek to retain some, there will be other, more difficult, conversati­ons ahead.

Another hectic, testing summer lies ahead.

But it will happen against an altogether more positive backdrop than last year’s rebuild.

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