St Mirren

SPFL Matchday 1: Five Talking Points

Rangers gave Philippe Clement his marching orders, Hibernian defeated a lethargic Celtic, there was no new manager bounce for Motherwell, and the cool-as-ice Kabangu kept Hearts ticking. Meanwhile, Ross County continued their push for the top six, and Aberdeen stave off capitulation with back-to-back wins. Here’s our round-up of the big talking points from Matchday 27 in the 2024/25 SPFL season. Clement sacked – Who’s next? Rangers 2-0 home defeat to St Mirren was the straw that broke the camel’s back. A dismal showing at Ibrox sealed Philippe Clement’s fate in a week filled with speculation about a potential US-led takeover by San Francisco 49ers’ investors. His dismissal came just hours after our report last night, which anticipated the club’s official announcement. After the match, Clement apologised to the fans, telling BBC Sport: “I can only say sorry and apologise [to the Rangers fans] from me and the team. This is not what Rangers teams need to show on the pitch. We all know this was by far below the standards we all expect.” However, for Rangers supporters, it was too little, too late. Some even set up a JustGiving page to fund his rumoured £1.2 million compensation fee. During his 16-month tenure, Clement showed rare glimpses of promise, particularly in Europe, where Rangers secured automatic qualification for the Europa League round of 16. Yet, he struggled to translate those performances into domestic success, leaving the club 13 points adrift of league leaders Celtic. Attention now turns to his long-term successor, with former Everton boss Sean Dyche, ex-Rangers title-winning manager Steven Gerrard, club legend Barry Ferguson, and former Light Blues midfielder Gennaro Gattuso all linked. Ferguson has been announced by the club to manage until the end of the season. VAR controversy mars heroic Hibs performance The heat on VAR grows with Brendan Rodgers’ latest comments following Celtic’s 2-1 defeat to Hibernian. An equaliser for Celtic was ruled out in the second half after the VAR overruled the on-field officials. Their decision was that Alistair Johnston crossed the ball after it was out of play, with the linesman originally calling it in. Regarding the controversy, Rodgers told BBC Sport:  “I was very disappointed we didn’t get that, especially when the linesman didn’t think it was out. He probably has the best view. “I don’t know how you can tell the ball is definitely out from an image from the 18-yard line. We need to see evidence the ball was out. If you don’t have that, you’re having a guess.” However, the debate surrounding the decision has unfairly overshadowed Hibernian’s outstanding and fully deserved performance. They fought with grit and determination to withstand Celtic’s attacks while capitalising on a fatigued Hoops defence in transition. A defining moment came when Rocky Bushiri heroically cleared the ball off the goal line following a surging run from Jota, sparking a deafening roar from the home crowd. By the final whistle, as Sunshine on Leith echoed around Easter Road, there could be no denying that Hibs had earned their moment of celebration. No new manager bounce for the ‘Well One could forgive the neutral fan who gave little thought to this fixture last weekend. However, there has been renewed interest following the appointment of Michael Wimmer as Motherwell’s manager. The German spoke about bringing “intensity, energy, and passion” to proceedings. Still, there was little evidence of this in the first half of a 1-0 defeat to Dundee United. Both sides came into the game in poor form, but the Tangerines struck first and stopped the Lanarkshire side from having a new manager bounce. The visitors did react positively in the second half but lacked the clinical edge to get back into the match.  On the second-half performance, Wimmer told BBC Sport: “We can work with the second half. It was really good. It was aggressive, we had opportunities, and we played forward. That’s what we want to see.” The Steelmen are now on their joint longest losing streak in ten years and worryingly looking over their shoulders at the teams behind them in the table. Kabangu injection saves Hearts Nine years ago, the Perth club witnessed a bejewelled Elton John in a stellar concert at McDiarmid Park, singing hits such as Crocodile Rock and Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. This weekend, they saw another Elton dazzle before their eyes. Elton Kabangu, the January recruit from Hearts. The Belgian scored twice in a 2-1 away victory to see Hearts look towards the top six and European places. Putting aside last week’s disappointing home result to Rangers, where he failed to take his chances, he was a thorn in the Saints’ side throughout and put away two clinical finishes to take his toll up to six goals from seven games. Hearts boss Neil Crichtley told BBC Sport about his performance: “I’m delighted for Elton Kabangu to get two goals after his disappointment last week. He’s such a great personality to have at the training ground every day. I thought he was fantastic again.” The Saints are running out of games to turn things around, languishing six points adrift at the bottom of the table. Their manager, Simo Valakari, joined the club in October to do just that. With each passing game, that is looking increasingly less likely, and preparations for the Championship may lie ahead. Battle for top six Ross County is on an excellent run of form, with five wins from their last 9. Their only two defeats from that run came against the two Glasgow giants. They came from behind this weekend to beat Dundee 3-1. On the performance, Cowie told BBC Sport: “I was most pleased with how we responded to going behind, we were not spooked by it and deservedly got back in the game at 1-1. “We came out the traps flying after half-time and scored two goals. A fantastic win, and it keeps the momentum going.” The man from Inverness has given the Dingwall fans hope, as the club is only two points off the

Read More »

Oisin Smyth earns ten man Saints three points in Dingwall

Venue: Global Energy Stadium                                                   Date: 21/12/24                                                       Time: 15:00   Oisin Smyth’s fantastic free kick gave St Mirren an important 2-1 win in awful weather despite Scott Tanser’s sending off early in the second half. Alex Iacovetti had given the visitors the lead against his former club in the first half when keeper Jack Hamilton failed to push Oisin Smith’s tame free kick into safety. County responded just 29 seconds into the second half when Michee Efete was quickest to his blocked effort following a Noah Chilvers cross. Despite going into the break a goal down, County were dominant in large spells, let down by a lack of accuracy. Chilvers sent a free kick from a promising position wide before Ronan Hale failed to trouble the Ellery Balcombe with an ambitious overhead kick. Already feeling the heat after conceding an equaliser Stephen Robinson looked on as Scott Tanser earned himself a second yellow after a crunching challenge on Aiden Denholm to leave his side with ten men. Despite the numerical disadvantage the Saints pushed for a winner, Oisin Smyth not far from giving them one, his attempt curling just wide. Jonah Ayunga’s introduction an added edge up front, the Kenyan international forcing Hamilton into making a strong save. Akil Wright had a golden opportunity for County but could only skew Kacper Lopata’s cross wide as the side fell to their fourth consecutive defeat. Cowie’s men face difficult games against Dundee and Hearts as they sit just two points off the bottom of the table. Smyth’s set-pieces separate sides Since moving from Oxford United the Northern Irishman has hardly been the first name on the team sheet, today was just his second start of the season. It’s fair to say he made the most of it in the Highlands. His first free kick, whilst hardly thunderous, put the keeper under enough pressure to see the ball land at the feet of a grateful Iacovetti. The second was textbook despite the blustery conditions, curling his effort from outside the box past a hapless Hamilton to give his side the win. He has to bide his time this season, but with a goal and an assist tonight Smyth has Stephen Robinson yet another head scratcher ahead of home fixtures against Rangers and Dundee. Lack of goals haunt County With just fourteen goals this season, Don Cowie’s side’s lack of creativity in the final third continues to harm any chance of becoming a top six side. Ronan Hale has been the main source of goals with five but he cut a isolated figure this evening, not getting the necessary service to cause damage, his desperation epitomised in the wildly inaccurate overhead kick in the first half. One month ago they were three points behind St Mirren in sixth, driven by an ability to pick up points here and there. Now that gap has stretched to nine as sides around the bottom of the table continue to earn crucial points of their own, Hibernian beating Aberdeen tonight. Efete’s goal was much deserved but the side needed to capitalise on the reduced numbers of their opponents, their failure to do so means they will drop into the relegation play-off place whatever the score when Hearts welcome St Johnstone tomorrow. What the managers said Ross County boss Don Cowie: “St Mirren go down to ten men, the game’s perfectly poised for us to step through and get a valuable three points. At that moment in time we did nowhere near enough to go and win the game. “[They] dealt with the conditions so much better than us and we did not test them considering they were down to ten. “The results have not been good enough over the last six weeks and maybe the players are feeling a little low in terms of confidence.” St Mirren boss Stephen Robinson: “I think the character shown was superb. It was a real tough game in the conditions I’m sure Don said the same. “We started really poorly in the second half but our response to that was terrific. “Oisin starts and scores a wonder goal and sets the first one up. He’s a boy I believe will get better and better with each game and more football matches.”   Attendance: 3,271 Line-ups: Ross County: J. Hamilton, C. Randall (c), K. Lopata, A. Wright, G. Harmon (J. Reid 68’), S. Allardice (A. Denholm 46’), J. Nisbet (E. Brophy 69’), M. Efete, N. Chilvers, R. Hale, J. White Substitutes: J. Amissah, R. Leak, V. Loturi, M. Sheaf, J. Grieves, A. Denholm, C. Telfer, E. Brophy, J. Reid St Mirren: E. Balcombe, R. Taylor, A. Iacovetti, M. Fraser, S. Tanser, K. Phillips, O. Smyth, E. Bwomono, G. Kiltie, M. Mandron (J. Ayunga 77’), R. Idowu (A. Gogic 76’) Substitutes: P. Urminsky, J. Ayunga, A. Gogic, J. Scott, C. Boyd-Munce, D. Adeniran, L. Kenny, C. Penman, E. Mooney. Referee: Iain Snedden

Read More »

Watt’s late winner in Paisley ends Motherwell slump

St Mirren 0 – 1 Motherwell Motherwell ended their three game winless run when Tony Watt’s added time winner punished St Mirren’s ill discipline. The striker used his experience to get away from his marker and catch a Lennon Miller free-kick to break hearts in Paisley after Alex Gogic was sent off. Ellery Balcombe’s fine save denied Jair Tavares early on, tipping the shot onto the crossbar. Not long after Aston Oxborough denied Conor McMenamin with an almost identical stop. The keeper denied the Northern Ireland international once again in the second half to ensure a clean sheet for his side. Both sides continued to push but Balcombe was on hand to deny Steve Seddon and Aspostolos Stamatelopoulos before the deadlock was finally broken. Discipline cost of the Saints when Gogic was given his marching orders after his dismissal with just minutes to go. The result means Motherwell open up a four point gap on the home side, sitting in fifth and seventh respectively. Attendance: 6,111 Line-ups: St Mirren: E. Balcombe, R. Taylor, A. Gogic, M. Fraser, S. Tanser, M. O’Hara, K. Phillips, E. Bwomono (J. Ayunga 84′), G. Kiltie (R. Idowu 67′), T. Olusanya (M. Mandron 68′), C. McMenamin Substitutes: J. Ayunga, C. Boyd-Munce, A. Iacovitti, R. Idowu, D. John, M. Mandron, E. Mooney, O. Smyth, P. Urminsky Motherwell: A. Oxborough, S. Blaney, L. Gordon, D. Casey, S. Seddon, E. Wilson (H. Paton), A. Halliday (S. Nicholson 83′), Jair Tavares (M. Kaleta 77′), L. Miller, A. Stamatelopoulos (M. Ebiye ’77), T. Watt Substitutes: K. Balmer, E. Ebiye, K. Hegyi, M. Kaleta, T. Maswanhise, S. Nicholson, S. O’Donnell, H. Paton, D. Zdravkoski

Read More »

Dundee United Continue Their Unbeaten Away Form with a 1-0 Victory Over St Mirren

It only took 53 seconds for this game to burst into life. A free kick whipped in by Mark O’Hara resulted in an acrobatic effort from centre half Richard Taylor flying over the bar. This was the start of a frantic first 10 minutes with the St Mirren defence, in particular, Charles Dunne standing resolute after several crosses from Will Ferry. This would become a familiar feature in the half. The pace and trickery of Toyosi Olusanya and Roland Idowu caused issues for the Dundee United defence with two penalty claims from the former being waved away by referee Ross Hardie. The home side were urged on by their manager on the touchline to quicken play up, but it wasn’t long before loose kicks from Balcombe and slack play in the middle of the park had the Paisley fans disgruntled in the stands, this followed by ex-Saints manager Jim Goodwin throwing the ball away made for a tense atmosphere at the SMISA stadium. Killian Phillips continued to impress in the black and white with some strong challenges and efforts on goal but ultimately couldn’t break the deadlock. After 20 minutes, the away side should have been 1-0 up. A free kick was fired in by Will Ferry and met by a free Adegboyega, but the defender scuffs his shot, and the ball is eventually cleared by Charles Dunne. Ross Docherty shows he hasn’t lost it with some nice footwork and switches of play in the middle of the park. United used him wisely in building attacks, with the home side standing firm. Saints grew into the game with Idowu dancing though the Tangerine’s defence before playing a 1-2 with Olusanya but his effort trickles wide of the post. An end-to- end encounter resulted in tensions spilling over on the touchline with words exchanged between both bosses. As the home side got to grips with the game, Goodwin made a tactical change with striker Jorte Van Der Sande coming off and replaced with winger Glenn Middleton. The change in formation meant they went toe-to-toe with the home side. This seemed to suit St Mirren as they built a few promising attacks but further efforts from Olusanya were sent over the bar. Before the half time whistle a long throw from Ross Graham led to a stramash in the box before a shot from a tangerine shirt flew wide of the Saints goal. The first save of the game came from Walton after an effort from Killian Phillips, seconds before the half time whistle. Half Time: St Mirren 0-0 Dundee United Dundee United started the half brightly with a couple of half chances and it wasn’t long before the United fans were up in arms with a claim for handball in the 49 th minute but this was checked and cleared by VAR before play continued. The restlessness in the stands continued as a slack pass from O’Hara broke down what looked like a promising Saints attack. The home side struggled to find a rhythm after the break, and it was wave after wave of attack from their opponents who were being rallied on by the 1000 strong away support. A sight Jim Goodwin didn’t want to see was the injury to experienced centre back Ross Graham who had to be substituted with a suspected hamstring injury. His replacement Kevin Holt was welcomed warmly with his name ringing around the away stand. Eventually a bit of quality came from the home side just before the hour mark. The ball was picked up by Boyd-Munce at the edge of the box before he rifled a shot destined for the top corner if not for an outstanding save from Jack Walton. This looked like it could have been a momentum shifter for St Mirren but instead Dundee United broke straight away and this time it was Balcombe who collected the ball after a tame effort from Liverpool-loanee Luca Stephenson. The home side started to live dangerously with the ever-present Marcus Fraser keeping Middleton at bay and it wasn’t long before Robinson made his first changes of the match. The returning Greg Kiltie comes on for Kevin Van Veen as does James Scott for Roland Idowu after 65 minutes. This resulted in a slight shift in formation from a narrow 4-4-2 to a more direct 4-3- 3. The changes seemed to ignite St Mirren for a spell and Killian Phillips left 2 United defenders toiling after some superb footwork before his effort flashes over the bar. Kiltie, a bright spark in this disappointing Saints performance put the Dundee United defence under pressure with his relentless running. This resulted in a corner which was swung in by his captain Mark O’Hara before meeting the head of Phillips who directs the ball across goal to Olusanya but the Saints man couldn’t find the target. It was then Goodwin’s turn to try and shift the momentum back in his side’s favour, youngster Luca Stephenson was replaced by academy graduate Miller Thomson and minutes later the away side took the lead. Pandemonium in the away stand followed as a corner was swung in and fell to Docherty at the edge of the box. His volleyed effort stings the palms of Balcombe before the goalkeeper parries it into the path of the onrushing Adegboyega who reacts quickest to head the Jim. Goodwin’s men in front. As the home side try to turn the tide, at 80 minutes Robinson throws on Bwomono, Mandron and minutes later, Smyth as his last roll of the dice in the search for an equaliser. It was here where the Saints started knocking at the door of the United defence as a header from O’Hara was punched away by Walton and a similar effort as his goal last week ends up over the bar from Phillips. Ultimately, the goal killed any momentum St Mirren had built up but Smyth looked bright in trying to create something in the final few minutes, but Kevin Holt and

Read More »