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  • tm4tj
    tm4tj

    St Johnstone -V- Inverness CT - Preview

      Teaser Paragraph:

    It's a Fair City right eenuff.

    It's back to the now Fair City of Perth this Saturday for our last game before the split. Let's hope this weekend is more productive than the last one when we crumbled badly against Hibernian, losing 2-3 in Inverness. That was on the back of a 0-1 defeat at the hands of St Johnstone last midweek and the long knives are out as the home fans get a reality check. The fable about Perth being a town has now been laid to rest, what will the fans find to squabble about next?

    Two winnable games and two poor performances have seen questions raised over the management teams ability to change things around and lift spirits. In all honesty, it's not just the last couple of games that has miffed most fans. We seem to be playing as poorly as we have done in the SPL and the system being deployed has not worked often enough. Does that make us a bad team? The harsh reality at the moment is yes, it does. Are we getting the best out of the players at our disposal? For most it would appear to be no. That is where our leaders come in and we need to see a bit more swashbuckle, a bit of panache, a bit of swagger even, but confidence would seem to be thin on the ground at the moment.

    Butcher has bemoaned the fact that injuries have curtailed our performances this season. That is correct, but most clubs go through this at some stage. Has he lost sight of the fact that it was him that removed half of our players before the season started, and we have never replaced them with adequate performers. The long ball tactic will go down in folklore up here, but it must be frustrating for 5ft 7in Billy McKay to watch numerous balls floating high over his head onto giant defenders nappers. I doubt we have used our players to the best of their somewhat limited ability, but surely Terry and Mo have a plan 'B' when things go awry and surely we need to get substitutions on the park earlier for them to make a contribution, especially when we are chasing the game and not just playing out time.

    It's not all doom and gloom although it sometimes feels like it. Jonny Hayes made his comeback from injury and showed us what we have been missing and was our most productive and creative player against Hibs. In spells, we did play some decent stuff, but errors crept into our game after we went ahead and some individual lapses made it easier for Hibs to take advantage of the situation. We were given and scored our first penalty since November 2010 (yay). Greg Tansey stepped up and buried it brilliantly. Why can't he be so effective with the numerous free kicks he wastes. He has not been the only wasteful one though and Tade and McKay need to up their strike rate after more guilt edged chances went astray.

    So Terry, charisma and spin alone are not going to keep us in this league, Dunfermline will manage that for us, but it would be nice to see a change of pattern, a change in the way we go about our business. Maybe the shackles that the SPL puts on teams holds them back, the fear of losing being greater than the joy of winning. Whatever it is, I hope we can be set free and lets get back to entertaining the fans and making it worth the money to come along.

    Alternative Maryhill has found the time to scribe the preview for this one, let's hope a change of author will get us back on track.

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Two football clubs, both alike in dignity

    In fair Scotia where we lay our scene...

    If Caley Thistle supporters were pushed to identify the Scottish club most like ICT, I’d hazard a guess that the majority would opt for St Johnstone. The clubs are from similarly-sized cities, both are run to small, tight budgets, both have spent the last decade either in the SPL or in the First Division, each has yet to win a major trophy, each has found it difficult to expand its fan base beyond a core of around three thousand, both are (happily) remote from the central belt and the fans of both have been accused, by unimaginative supporters from the central belt, of loving animals just a little too much (meh). Last season’s SPL seemed to underline the similarity in size and potential of the two teams, with ICT finishing in seventh place and St Johnstone in eighth. Yet fast forward a year and St Johnstone are assured of a top six finish and contemplating the possibility of European football, while ICT are in tenth, with many supporters fearing for the club’s prospects next season. So why the dramatic change?

    The last fixture between the teams, just ten days ago, did not reveal an obvious gulf in quality: the difference in what was apparently a dreadful game was made by a penalty for St Johnstone. Looking at the St Johnstone team that started the game, however, what struck me immediately was how familiar most of the names were: this sort of continuity is something of a rarity in SPL teams these days. Moreover, almost every member of that St Johnstone team, even the more recent arrivals, had significant SPL experience as well as, in some cases, experience at a higher level: in defence, Dave Mackay, Frazer Wright, David McCracken, Alan Maybury have all played many times in the top Scottish division; Jody Morris, Chris Millar and Liam Craig provide similar SPL experience and continuity in midfield (and on Wednesday were supported by Lee Croft who, although a recent addition to the SPL, has several years’ experience with English Premiership and Championship clubs); while strike partners Sandaza and Sheridan, revelatory this season, had both shown plenty of promise, if not consistency, with established SPL teams in the past. All this without mentioning the SPL experience on the bench, in the shape of David Robertson and Steven Anderson, and also held by the temporarily unavailable Calum Davidson and Murray Davidson.

    By contrast, six of the starting eleven for Inverness (Piermayr, Golobart, Tansey, Jones, Tade, Mackay) had never played in the SPL, or with each other, until this season; and three more (Tuffey, Shinnie, Sutherland) would be classed by most as having had limited SPL experience. Only Tokely and Foran can compare favourably with the large majority of the St Johnstone team in terms of the number of SPL games played. When the two teams are considered in terms of their experience in this league, their experience of playing together, and the levels they have played at, is it any wonder that St Johnstone sit eighteen points and five places better off than ICT at the time of writing?

    Pointing this out is not intended as criticism. Terry Butcher felt he had to rebuild last summer, and opted to go, for the most part, with young players from the English reserve and lower league football, having previously had success with this policy in the shape of Jonny Hayes and Lee Cox. Yet most would agree that, even bearing in mind the injuries ICT have endured this year, the season has been disappointing and that further work will have to be done on the squad over the summer. The model of the current St Johnstone squad would suggest that, if possible, it would be a shrewd move to seek out experienced Scottish players to bolster ICT’s squad and ensure SPL survival, allowing the younger players to develop under less pressure.

    Anyway, enough of worrying about the future for now. Before that, Terry Butcher’s players have an opportunity on Saturday to make amends for the defensive errors and goalmouth profligacy that led to them throwing away a game they dominated against Hibs last Sunday, as well as to prove to St Johnstone and their own supporters that the gap between the teams is not in fact a fair reflection of any gap in quality. Individual errors apart, the performance against Hibs did contain some glimmers of hope: the return of Jonny Hayes from injury provided a greater attacking threat and more of an outlet for balls from the back, and consequently, in the first half at least, there was far less of the long-ball stuff that we had seen the team revert to in recent weeks; Roman Golobart again showed that he is a defender prepared to carry the ball forward and look for the opportunity to start attacking moves, rather than merely clearing his lines; and Greg Tansey had a more effective first half than I have seen him have for a long time although, by the second half, his game seemed to have deteriorated along with that of the rest of the team. Bearing in mind that the last game against St Johnstone was a close-run thing, and that ICT were still without Jonny Hayes when it was played, all hope for Saturday is not lost: if we can cut out individual errors at the back; if McKay and Tade can show more composure in front of goal; if we show patience with the passing game and our players are prepared to take their players on; then we have a chance. But we seem to have been saying ‘if’ an awful lot this season...

    Whatever happens, the CaleyAway crowd will be there as usual: small but vocal, pessimistic but defiant, pished but standing, and hating everything in a high-visibility jacket. See you in the Muirton. Or the Tulloch. Or the 208. Or all three.

    Alternative Maryhill's Prediction:- St Johnstone 1 – Inverness Caledonian Thistle 1

    ***Latest Team News***

    Inverness have no fresh injury worries on top of the long term missing Chris Hogg and Andrew Shinnie. Jonny Tuffey will still deputise for Ryan Esson and Aaron Doran will look to get involved as he will need match fitness after his lengthy lay off. If you have not already done so, take at look at this http://chrishoggthef...blogspot.co.uk/ This will tell you all you need to know about the man and his battle to get back to fitness, but it is also an intriguing insight into how the mind works when faced with adversity. Good luck with the rehab Chris.

    St Johnstone are without the suspended Fraser Wright. Marcus Haber may miss out, and the Davidson's, Calum and Murray are pushing for fitness. Should they be fit, then Maybury and Millar could make way to accommodate them. Derek Riordan could make his SPL comeback should Steve Lomas require an extra striker of proven quality, but he may have to start on the bench.




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    Guest Mahonio

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    Good preview Alternative Maryhill and also to tm4tj for the small preview at the top :).

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