Goodwin reveals approach to sign Dundee star - gossippublished at 13:26 BST

Jim Goodwin has revealed Dundee United made an approach for Swansea ace Cameron Congreve prior to his loan switch to city rivals Dundee last summer. (The Courier), external


Jim Goodwin has revealed Dundee United made an approach for Swansea ace Cameron Congreve prior to his loan switch to city rivals Dundee last summer. (The Courier), external
Image source, SNSDundee United loan pair Amar Fatah and Luca Stephenson have both been ruled out for the rest of the season with hamstring injuries.
Kristijan Trapanovski and Isaac Pappoe (both knee) remain sidelined. With goalkeeper Ashley Maynard-Brewer (shoulder) still out, Ruaridh Adams has been recalled from his loan at East Fife to provide cover for Dave Richards.
Dundee have a fully fit squad with the exception of Clark Robertson, who is out with a thigh injury.
Jack Herrall
BBC Sport Scotland
Image source, SNSDundee United manager Jim Goodwin has been speaking to the media before the derby meeting with Dundee on Sunday.
Here are the key points from his press conference:
On being the club's longest-serving manager since legendary boss Jim McLean, Goodwin says he is "delighted" to have been at Tannadice for three years and notes such longevity in the modern game is "unusual", adding he has "loved every minute of it".
Goodwin admits this season has been a "disappointment in terms of not being able to get into the top six", but says it's important to enjoy the good times and stick together in the more difficult periods and that the club have made progress on and off the pitch during his tenure.
The manager insists they are still only in the "early stages of the project and where we want to eventually take Dundee United".
Goodwin says transforming the squad from one of the oldest in the league to one of the youngest and securing young players on contracts "can only be a good thing for the club as a whole going forward".
On this weekend's derby, Goodwin says: "There is no doubt we will be taking this game seriously, we know what it means to the supporters first and foremost."
United want to "put right" their collapse in the last derby, where they "let ourselves down" as Dundee came from two down in stoppage time to draw 2-2 in a frantic end.
Goodwin adds: "We need a similar level of performance, but we just need to make sure that on Sunday, if we get our noses in front, we get the job done."
Goodwin says "there is a lot at stake" for several United players for the rest of the season, despite the club being safe from relegation, with some vying for their club future and international places.
United have had talks with "certain members of the squad" about contracts for next season and are "obviously continually looking in the transfer market" to try to bolster the squad for next season, on top of pre-contracts already agreed.
On injured duo Amar Fatah and Luca Stephenson, who are set to miss the remainder of the season, Goodwin says it will "give opportunities for others" but admits both players will be a big loss having played the majority of games this term.
David Richards will step up as starting goalkeeper with Ashley Maynard-Brewer out injured. Johnny Russell and Craig Sibbald are both "pushing" for a place in the squad this weekend.
Image source, SNSDundee United have scored exactly twice in six of their past seven Scottish Premiership games against Dundee, though the exception was their last at home, a 1-0 defeat in January.
Dundee have won their past two Premiership visits to Tannadice, as many as their previous 20 in the top flight beforehand (W2 D11 L7).
United have won three successive league games, last winning four in a row on home soil in the division in November 2014.
When in the bottom six, Dundee have won their first game after the split in five of the past seven occasions (D1 L1), including a 1-0 victory at Hearts last season.
Since the start of February, only Youssef Chermiti (seven) has more Premiership goals than Simon Murray (six). Murray has now scored 26 goals in 80 appearances for Dundee in the competition – just two fewer than he netted in 95 games for all his other clubs (including United) combined in the top flight (28).

We asked for your views on which Dundee United player has failed to live up to expectation this season.
Here's what some of you said:
Eddie: Bert Esselink, Max Watters, Ivan Dolcek all showed early promise but have failed to build on it, but I think the major flop this season has been between the sticks. Yevhen Kucherenko made Mark Birighitti look good! Why can we not seem to find a solid, reliable goalkeeper these days?
Garry: Watters, every defender and every keeper we have had this season.
Mierse: Dolcek - looked so exciting and in a different class in his first few games then something happened. After that he was never the same. Looked disinterested and going through the motions. What a waste.
Ian: Dolcek - started like a proverbial house on fire. Ran away from the ball against Rangers, had he collected, we would have won and sadly that's all he has done in the last six months.
Derek: Watters - the way Jim Goodwin sets up his teams it is essential we have a frontman who attacks the crosses and is reliable in front of goal - see Sam Dalby. Watters has given us none of the above. Only positive is that he is a loan player and must be sent back to Barnsley at end of season.
Ally: Ross Graham - it was his time to step up as club captain and show real leadership. That's not happened, to the point there's a real question over whether we'd extend his contract beyond the summer.
Mike: Watters - never a striker.

Last week we asked for your Dundee United player of the year - and it was a close call between Will Ferry, Luca Stephenson and Amar Fatah.
Now we want to know the Tannadice player who has most failed to live up to expectations this season.
It could be a new signing who has underwhelmed or an existing squad member who has not kicked on.
Ronny Costello
Fan writer

There hasn't been much to shout about this week but in a strange way that probably sums Dundee United up just now.
A 4-2 defeat at Ibrox followed by a 3-2 win over Livingston tells you everything you need to know about another rollercoaster season.
There is a good team in there but also a team that cannot quite get out of its own way.
The numbers back it up: Attack wise, we're sixth best with 45 goals scored. It's a team that going forward has pace and real quality, especially on the counter.
But defensively, it's a back three and a goalkeeper that has to defend far too much. Only two teams have conceded more than the 54 United have and only Livingston have kept fewer than our five clean sheets.
It's no wonder United find themselves stuck in no man's land.
Seventh place and likely safe and clear of trouble but miles away from where they wanted to be after finishing fourth last season. It is a strange place to be but a bit meh... not bad enough to panic and definitely not good enough to get excited.
Paul touched on it last week with Amar Fatah and Luca Stephenson. Two players who brought real quality into the team. Losing them now only underlines where United are, but with these guys out can two others step up with five games to play?
Looking ahead to the summer and next season, there seems to be some positives. Charlie Dewar's time on loan at Alloa has led to him being named in the PFA Scotland League One team of the year - can he build on that and make a claim for being part of the first-team squad like Big Sam Cleall-Harding and Owen Stirton have this season?
Current contract options look like being taken up and three new faces are already signed up for the 26-27 campaign.
But the priority is clear. Find a way to keep the door shut while still carrying a threat at the other end.
Get that right and this season looks like a stepping stone. Get it wrong again and it will feel like a missed opportunity and nothing learned.
Ronny Costello can be found at the Dode Fox Podcast, external

Ray Bradshaw will be joined by fans up and down the country on Monday for This Is Fans Only to discuss the weekend's biggest points.
Supporters will come on live and viewers will get the chance to join in on the debate, as well.
The show will be broadcast live on the BBC Sport Scottish Football YouTube channel at 18:00 BST.
To make sure you don't miss any bespoke video content, make sure to subscribe to the channel HERE, external.
Melbourne Victory right-back Joshua Rawlins has agreed a three-year deal with Dundee United, becoming the Tannadice club's third pre-contract signing from the A-League, and the 21-year-old will arrive this summer for a modest compensation fee with associated incentive-based clauses. (The Courier), external
Partick Thistle's Ben Stanway, fellow midfielder David Watson, of Kilmarnock, and Dundee United right-back Ryan Strain are among the leading players in the Scottish Professional Football League who are out of contract this summer. (Edinburgh Evening News), external
Read Monday's Scottish Gossip in full.
Image source, Getty ImagesAustralia Under-23 cap Joshua Rawlins joined Melbourne Victory two years ago

Image source, SNSWill Ferry and Luca Stephenson have the joint most Premiership assists (five) for United this season
We asked you to tell us who deserves to be Dundee United's player of the year.
Here are some of your views:
Alex: Will Ferry, Mr Consistent.
Sean: My player of the year would be Pan Camara, one of the few new signing successes in what has been a terrible season. Where would we be without the highly unlikely six points gained against Celtic? Almost on a par with Dundee and Aberdeen, fighting relegation!
John: Over the season it has to be Luca Stephenson. He has been a consistent performer whoever the opposition was. He goes back to Liverpool with our best wishes. He has given us two season of pure joy. Just hope he doesn't return to Scottish Premiership other than to wear tangerine.
JennyLee: It's got to be Amar Fatah. Fast, skilful and exciting to watch. Just a pity we can't have the on-loan wing wizard for longer. If he'd been at Tannadice a bit longer, Emmanuel Agyei would also be in the conversation as he's been fantastic since he arrived, covering every blade of grass.
Tom: Ferry has been outstanding, doing almost everything. Corners, throw-ins, great crosses (from everywhere) and, of course, defending (better than most of his colleagues).
Oleksa: My view is there are only two candidates - Stephenson and Fatah. They both gave the fans joy and hope in a disappointing season. My vote goes to Stephenson for being more consistent over the season. They both have a great future in the game and thanks for the memories.
Andy: Camara for me. In and out the side, but we generally looked better when he played.
Ian: Vicko Sevelj he has been Mr Consistent all season, always give 100%. He is closely followed by Ferry... just hope we keep hold of both.

Dundee United duo Amar Fatah and Luca Stephenson will both miss the rest of the season with hamstring injuries. (Courier), external

After an impressive fourth-placed finish last term, this season has been far from what Dundee United fans would have hoped for.
Manager Jim Goodwin started the campaign with an almost entirely new squad and took a while to get them firing.
The Tangerines now find themselves in the bottom six but comfortably clear of the danger zone and with very little left to play for.
We want to know who has been your Dundee United player of the year? Tell us here.
Tyrone Smith
BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter

Dundee United's past two games have summed their season up – a 4-2 away defeat to Rangers followed by a 3-2 home win over bottom club Livingston.
They are a team who fare reasonably well on the attacking front, but have struggled to keep the door shut at the back. That assessment is reinforced by the stats.
Jim Goodwin's side have netted 45 times in the league this season – that places them sixth (alongside Falkirk) in terms of goals scored. But it has been a different story on the defensive front where they have conceded 54 times, with only Kilmarnock and Livingston shipping more goals.
And they are second bottom of the pile (with Dundee) when it comes to clean sheets having mustered just five shutouts – only relegation-haunted Livi have fared worse.
Given all of that it is perhaps unsurprising they find themselves drifting towards the end of the campaign in Premiership no-man's land.
United are seventh in the table, seven points above eighth-placed Aberdeen and more importantly a hefty 12 clear of Kilmarnock, who occupy the relegation play-off spot.
Being top of the bottom six, and safe from relegation, will be little consolation for a team that were looking to build on last season's impressive fourth-place finish.
Goodwin will undoubtedly now be firmly focused on building for next term, where finding that balance between front and back in his team will be the big conundrum he has to solve.

Dundee United will activate one-year contract extensions for centre-half Ross Graham and utility defender Vicko Sevelj, but injury concerns make extending the stays of winger Kristijan Trapanovski and full-back Ryan Strain less likely. (The Courier), external
Read Wednesday's Scottish Gossip in full.

Paul McNicoll
Fan writer

If the rumour mill is to be believed and, more convincingly, what we all saw with our own eyes on Saturday, it looks like we may have already witnessed the final appearances of two of our standout players this season.
Both Luca Stephenson and Amar Fatah, our on-loan star men, seem set to miss the run-in, with 17 May shaping up to be a grateful goodbye rather than just another fixture.
Let's start with Luca. Arriving at Tannadice on loan from Liverpool at the beginning of last season, he didn't take long to show exactly what he was about.
Calm, reliable and capable of playing just about anywhere you asked him to, he quickly became one of the first names on the teamsheet. His performances over the season quite rightly earned him United's young player of the year award.
Getting him back for another loan spell this season felt like a minor miracle, football's version of finding a tenner in an old jacket. And once again, he has delivered without fuss or fanfare.
Wherever he's been asked to play, he's done it well, and then just quietly got on with it again the following week.
What happens next for the 22-year-old at Liverpool is anyone's guess, but he has more than shown the ability to make a serious impact at a high level. In short: thank you, Luca, it's been a pleasure.
Now, Fatah. He arrived with a bit more noise around him and a price tag in his recent past to match. Still only 21, already the subject of a £4.5m move to Troyes, and even a trial with Manchester City in 2024, there was every reason for excitement.
It's fair to say he didn't explode out of the blocks. There were moments early on where you could see the quality, but it came in flashes rather than full performances.
But as the weeks went by, those flashes turned into something much more consistent and much more dangerous.
By the business end of the season, Amar had become the spark. The creator. The player you look to when something needs to happen. The kind of player who gets fans out of their seats and occasionally has defenders questioning their life choices.
It hasn't all been smooth, of course. The missed penalty against Rapid Vienna and that red card against Hearts in January were tough moments.
But to his credit, he has responded exactly how you'd hope, by bouncing back stronger each time. Those experiences haven't held him back, they've sharpened him, perhaps even matured him.
Which made Saturday all the more difficult to watch. A loose pass, an awkward moment, and suddenly he's down on the less-than-pristine Tannadice pitch.
As he lay there, the thought crept in this might be the last time we see him in a United shirt. If that is the case, it's a cruel end, for him and the fans.
Still, football always leaves a little room for hope. There have been whispers about bringing Amar back on loan next season.
While the club would jump at the chance, it's hard not to think he may have bigger opportunities knocking. He looks destined for the next level.
Whether this is goodbye or just "see you later", both Amar and Luca can leave Tannadice with their heads held high. They've given everything, made their mark, and left supporters with plenty of good memories.
Paul McNicoll can be found at the Dode Fox Podcast, external
Sportscene analysis of Dundee United's dramatic late penalty
Sportscene pundit Steven Naismith says Livingston defender Brooklyn Kabongolo took an unnecessary risk to concede the penalty which cost his team a point at Dundee United on Saturday.
Marvin Bartley's team were on course to win their first league game since August when Lewis Smith's double put them 2-1 up at Tannadice.
But Krisztias Keresztes equalised and Kabongolo then fouled Zac Sapsford, who converted the resulting penalty.
"When you're not in a great position, you can't take a risk and that's what he's done," former Scotland forward Naismith said. "Sapsford gets in, keeps it in play and it was a comfortable finish."
Naismith also praised head coach Jim Goodwin, despite United missing out on a top-half finish this season.
"Where they have been and the job Jim Goodwin has done, it's progression," he said. "They are building and when you take a step back, they are safe and can build for next season."
Although Livingston seem destined to be relegated this term, Naismith thinks Marvin Bartley has likely earned the chance to manage them in the Championship next season,
"Marvin Bartley has put his own stamp on it and he should keep his job and build if they go down," he said."
Amy Canavan
BBC Sport Scotland

Kelle Roos (Kilmarnock): Not the finest all-round performance but came up clutch deep into stoppage time to deny Dundee from the spot and save a potentially priceless point for Killie.
Alexander Jensen (Aberdeen): Pushed back a little bit but impressed at wing-back against Hibernian. Tanked up and down the touchline and coped well when Hibs were trying to put him under pressure.
Krisztian Keresztes (Dundee United): Admittedly, not the finest weekend for defenders, but the substitute hauled United level with an important header to allow them to push on for a late win against Livingston.
Will Ferry (Dundee United): And here's the man who set him up. Ferry also opened the scoring with a superb solo goal at Tannadice.
Hyun-jun Yang (Celtic): Few in green and white impressed in a narrow win over St Mirren at Celtic Park, but the South Korean showed up again.
Nicolas Raskin (Rangers): For his second-half showing at Falkirk. The Belgium international was like a man possessed after the break with an abundance of fight, quality and creativity on show. Displayed his very best as Rangers ripped Falkirk apart in a bonkers second 45.
Beni Baningime (Hearts): Back alongside Cammy Devlin in the engine room and back pulling the strings for Hearts. A classy performance - again - in the crucial win over Motherwell.
Emmanuel Gyamfi (Aberdeen): Outside his needless incident with Hibs striker Owen Elding, for which he was shown a yellow card after a VAR review, the wide man was Aberdeen's biggest threat in one of his better performances for the Dons. Hooked balls in at every chance he could, something Stephen Robinson will be desperate to see more of.
Sabah Kerjota (Hearts): Came on in the 66th minute and immediately became Hearts' set-piece taker, whipping in inviting deliveries - including one that led to the second goal. His cameo performances have impressed to the point there is clamour for him to start the upcoming Edinburgh derby over Alexandros Kyziridis.
Kevin Nisbet (Aberdeen): The man grateful for those deliveries from Gyamfi. Kept his cool from the spot against his former side before smashing the much-needed second over the line... just. Big, big goals and an equally impressive all-round performance.
Lewis Smith (Livingston): Doing all he can to keep Livingston in the league, chipping in with another two goals. Even if the Lions are relegated, which is increasingly likely, Smith should remain in the top flight. One wouldn't think he'd be short of suitors.
Watch all five goals in United's win against Livi.
Image source, SNSUnited boss Jim Goodwin admitted he thought his players were in the driving seat against Livingston thanks to Will Ferry's opener.
However, after Lewis Smith's quickfire double, the United manager was delighted to see his side equalise through Krisztian Keresztes before Zac Sapsford secured all three points with a stoppage-time penalty.
Goodwin said: "In the first half I thought we were quite comfortable, scored a really good goal – Will Ferry doing what he does best, being positive in the one vs one and producing a great finish into the bottom-right corner with his weaker right foot.
"We were all quite relaxed at half-time. I didn't think Livingston offered a great deal in the first half.
"I never envisaged the start to the second half coming. We gave away two really, really poor goals. The first one, we gift the ball to the Livingston attacker.
"For the second one, we highlighted before the game the quality that the Livingston goalkeeper has with that volley out of his hands. He puts a really good ball into a good area.
"It's then a foot race between Smith and Ross Graham, and young Lewis Smith has scored goals like that all season.
"We gave ourselves a mountain to climb. We tried to change it up then and get a bit of fresh legs on there. I thought the substitutes were positive.
"We scored a good set play and then, in the dying moments, Zac Sapsford gets the penalty."

We asked for your views on Dundee United's 3-2 win against Livingston.
Here's what some of you said:
Ally: On the balance of play we deserved the win, but clear as day that defence requires major surgery in the summer after losing two goals in that manner. There's only one or two teams who'd let us off with it. Would be a very sad end to the season for Amar Fatah if his injury is what it looked like.
Gordon: A bizarre game, United were on top, playing some decent stuff in the first half and benefiting from a superb Will Ferry strike with his right foot.
Then the second half began with United still on top. Then, as the song goes, it fell apart. Some awful defending from United and in three minutes we are 2-1 down. Jim Goodwin changes 'everything' and we get back in the game from a corner and then a last-second penalty. That's United's season, we can't defend well enough but there's always drama.
Patricia: It was really good to see United winning again. Three points are always welcome. I expected them to come out in the second half and score more goals, as they appeared to be enjoying themselves in the first, but it was a different United which emerged from the dugout.
They were disorganised and sloppy and inevitably paid the price. Iurie Iovu should have been substituted much earlier. It was apparent that his head injury was making him reluctant to head the ball which he usually does with alacrity. Thankfully Krisztian Keresztes came on eventually, and managed to get the equaliser, courtesy of Ferry's cross and Zac Sapsford made no mistake with the penalty. Job done.
Ross: Soft, easy, stupid. Same defensive mistakes. The manager talks of character. Show some when you're dominating the first half and take your chances. Show some when you come out in the second half and stay disciplined. But no, the United way this season is to press the panic button at the first opportunity. Fight back maybe. Lucky definitely. But scoring a 93rd minute penalty to win is character.
Kenny: We were the better team and deserved the win. Ferry and Sapsford put in a great shift. Some of the team looked like their minds were on their holidays. To be honest, I just want this season to be over. Rapid Vienna seems a long time ago.

Zac Sapsford's stoppage-time penalty sealed an unlikely comeback victory for Dundee United to deny Livingston a first Scottish Premiership win since August and edge their apparently inevitable relegation even closer.
Read the full match report here.
Have your say on the match here.
