The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

WHERE WILL DONS BE THIS TIME NEXT YEAR?

- CHRIS CRIGHTON FAN VIEW

Aberdeen’s 22nd defeat of the season may not have smarted as much as many of the preceding 21, with nothing material left to play for.

But it was nonetheles­s a noteworthy figure for this most uninspirin­g of squads to reach.

For it lifted 2021-22 into the club’s all-time top five for defeats in a single season.

Only in Ebbe Skovdahl’s comically disastrous debut, the woeful campaigns which brought about the firings of Steve Paterson and Mark McGhee, and a 1916-17 effort in which many of the Dons’ players were called away for more significan­t duties in World War I, have Aberdeen teams been beaten more frequently than this.

That they could be attracting comparison­s with the likes of those extraordin­arily shambolic predecesso­rs would be bad at any time, but immediatel­y after a period in which the side had been a fixture in the top four it is almost inexcusabl­e.

For the club to feel it could progress from the position of comfortabl­e atrophy it had slipped into was laudable; that it was willing to take risks in the pursuit of something better cannot be criticised.

But it is clear that many of the decisions taken towards that end were wrong. Some ruinously so.

The upshot is that the prominence won hard over the previous eight seasons has been frittered away in one, meaning what lies ahead is far more akin to a rebuild from scratch than it ever ought to have been.

Where Aberdeen will be a year from now is anyone’s guess.

There is significan­t room for fast improvemen­t, but equally it is not certain they have bottomed out yet.

Inevitably the refit will be funded by the sales of Lewis Ferguson and Calvin Ramsay – there is no guarantee next season’s team will be better than this.

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