The Sunday Post (Inverness)

They were during the rather odd Italian Job?

Star man Prospects

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been only one victory since the end of that month.

But where does a club with an average gate of just over 5,000 expect to finish?

Gary Dicker has been a model of consistenc­y this season.

The Irishman does a superb job of protecting the back-four, winning possession and moving the ball on to attacking players.

It’s the sort of job that Scott Brown and Ryan Jack do so effectivel­y for the Old Firm.

That Killie’s skipper is also their best player illustrate­s one of their problems.

To improve their league position, they need to start scoring goals.

Killie have only hit the net 17 times in 21 Premiershi­p fixtures.

That’s the same as 10th-placed St Mirren, and only St Johnstone, sitting ninth, have scored fewer, with 16.

Dicker’s contributi­on helps hugely when it comes to creating an impressive goals-against column.

Rangers and Celtic have the meanest defences, and Kilmarnock are the best of the rest.

A formula that sees a team struggle to score, but not lose many, tends to see them end up around middle of the table.

Killie are currently seventh, and they won’t go much higher unless someone with a bit of attacking flair eclipses Dicker’s performanc­es in the second half of the season.

Alex Dyer has been given the manager’s job until the end of the campaign. He has been at the club for more than two years, and knows what is required.

Expectatio­ns soared during his time as Steve Clarke’s assistant, and anything other than a top-six finish will lead to a lot of grumbling among the supporters.

They feel there’s a squad that, with a bit of fine tuning, should be capable of sitting above mid-table.

Killie haven’t scored in their last six matches, and suffered five consecutiv­e defeats before the winter break.

So there has to be a change in their attacking play to stop the rot. Youssouf Mulumbu was a great source of midfield creativity last season, and bringing him back would provide a big boost to morale.

However, the Congo internatio­nalist has been without a club for six months, and would take time to get up to speed.

Dyer’s top priority has to be to get his hands on a goalscorer.

But he’s not the only boss looking for that.

The January transfer window isn’t the ideal time to recruit a striker.

Anyone available is likely to have had limited playing time in recent months.

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