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Dundee fans are right to be all shook up as Elvis enters the building

Dundee fans are right to be all shook up as Elvis enters the building

But it is fair to say that quite a number of the Dark Blues faithful are all shook up by the appointment of their new manager.
Comments on social media websites are not always an accurate barometer of how a fanbase is feeling. Generally speaking, the younger and more partisan members of a support post messages online. Their missives are seldom complimentary. But the response to Pressley replacing Tony Docherty on the internet has been almost universally negative.
Very underwhelming. Are season tickets refundable? If he was the standout candidate then who else was on that list? This is disappointing. Is this for real? And those were just the remarks which were printable in a family newspaper.
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Yep, it is fair to say the new incumbent of the Dens Park hotseat will have to win around a few doubters in the stands when the new season gets underway next month.
The statement which confirmed the bombshell news revealed that the 51-year-old was currently on a pre-arranged silver wedding anniversary holiday in the Far East but will be cutting short his break so he can begin his new job as soon as possible. There will be no honeymoon period when he starts.
The outcry is no reflection on Pressley either as a player or as a person. He enjoyed a long career at a high level and won many major honours. He represented his country with distinction on no fewer than 32 occasions. He has worked extensively in the media since retiring and always provides a good insight into the game when he appears on television or radio. He is a popular and well kent figure in the Scottish game.
No, the problem that Dundee fans have with him succeeding Docherty, who led them to a top six Premiership finish two seasons ago and kept them up in the top flight last term, is his less than impressive track record as a coach.
(Image: Ross Parker - SNS Group) Yes, he has had spells in charge at Falkirk, Coventry, Fleetwood Town, Pafos and Carlisle United during the past 15-years, but he has not enjoyed many significant successes. The Challenge Cup is the only piece of silverware he has deposited in a trophy cabinet since swapping his boots for a tracksuit. And that was back in 2012.
He has had other roles in football since first moving into the dugout. He has been a scout at Southampton and has most recently worked as head of individual development at Brentford. He will have picked up invaluable experience and made numerous useful contacts in those positions.
But the fact that he hasn't worked as a manager since being sacked by Carlisle five-and-a-half years ago hasn't exactly gone unnoticed. The last match which he oversaw was way back in the November of 2019.
So why is he the right man to elevate the team to a higher level exactly? Would an individual who has impressed with his work in recent seasons and has something tangible to show for his efforts not be better placed to take them forward?
Docherty's services were dispensed with last month because his board felt that 'results did not match the standards expected'. It was, considering that his captain and standout player Luke McCowan left for Celtic on the final day of the summer transfer window, a pretty bloodthirsty call. But the harshness of that decision has been exacerbated by the choice of his successor.
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Dundee fans will get behind Pressley – who will work closely with his technical director Gordon Strachan, his former manager at Celtic, and new technical manager David Longwell, who has previously worked at St Mirren, Orlando City, New York Red Bulls and Burnley – and hope that he can justify being brought on board.
But at this particular moment in time they are struggling to see why a club which has, despite winning the Championship and promotion and then recording their best Premiership finish in nine years, been through four managers in the last three years has decided to go down this route. Many are already concerned about their ability to stay up in the 2025/26 campaign.
Steven Pressley has much to prove and will be doing well to earn an encore.

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Scotland goalkeeper Cieran Slicker has debut to forget in home defeat to Iceland
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Scotland goalkeeper Cieran Slicker has debut to forget in home defeat to Iceland

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Scotland goalkeeper Cieran Slicker has debut to forget in home defeat to Iceland
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time21 minutes ago

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Scotland goalkeeper Cieran Slicker has debut to forget in home defeat to Iceland

Luckless home goalkeeper Angus Gunn sustained an injury in the third minute and eventually had to be replaced by the 22-year-old Ipswich stopper, minutes after which he conceded possession before Andri Gudjohnsen beat him with a terrific drive. John Souttar levelled in the 25th minute from a corner but Slicker and his defenders struggled collectively when the visitors regained the lead from a corner, just before the break, with Scotland midfielder Lewis Ferguson putting through his own goal. Slicker was again found wanting in the 52nd minute when he was beaten by a Victor Palsson header, which added the gloss for the visitors. Iceland had lost all six of their previous meetings with Scotland but they deserved their first win. Sturm Graz right-back Max Johnston and Ipswich forward George Hirst made their first starts in an otherwise experienced team with defender Kieran Tierney winning his 50th cap playing in a back five. After a minute's applause to remember former Scottish FA president Jack McGinn, midfielder John McGinn's grandfather, who died last month aged 92, play started then soon stopped when Gunn – starting as Craig Gordon was injured – stayed on the ground after landing awkwardly. After some treatment, the 29-year-old was replaced by Slicker, who endured a nightmare start. His clearance was immediately returned to Gudjohnsen – son of former Chelsea and Barcelona striker Eidur – and from 20 yards, he drove the ball high past Slicker. Two more poor kicks from the keeper did nothing for confidence. In the 21st minute, good pressing from McGinn won him possession inside the Iceland penalty area but from his pinpoint cross, Hirst headed over from six yards. Then after Slicker had gathered a drive from Jon Dagur Thorsteinsson at the second attempt, the Hirst then tested Iceland goalkeeper Elias Olafsson with a drive which was tipped over the crossbar but from Johnston's corner, Souttar stooped to head in from six yards. Scotland began to find some flow but when Albert Gundmundsson delivered a corner in the 44th minute, Slicker and his defenders failed to deal with it and the ball ricocheted off a couple of players before it came off Ferguson and over the line. Boos rang around the stadium at half-time and there was more consternation after 52 minutes when Palsson's header from a Gudmundsson free-kick went through the hands of Slicker, with VAR confirming the goal after a suspicion of offside. The Ipswich keeper was then sarcastically cheered by some of the Tartan Army after a comfortable collect. At the other end, Hirst's effort from close range – it looked like the ball came off his shoulder following a Johnston cross – was brilliantly saved by Olafsson. The Iceland keeper was beaten in the 63rd minute by Hirst after parrying a Scott McTominay shot, but the Napoli midfielder was ruled offside. Motherwell midfielder Lennon Miller came on to make his Scotland debut in the 68 minute, along with striker Che Adams and defender Scott McKenna, by which time the home side had gained the initiative. Olafsson tipped McGinn's clever chip over the crossbar in the 88th minute but there was no late Scotland siege.

Bath's second-half revival carries them past Bristol and into Premiership final
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