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Brewster facing more buffeting as he fails to find answer blowing in the wind

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Published Date: 18 January 2009
Hamilton Academical 1
Mensing 39 pen

Inverness CT 0
IF A manager loses football games he will be under pressure, said Craig Brewster last week. It wasn't a statement of Dalai Lama-style enlightenment. If his team loses seven league games in a row, sinks to the foot of the table and falls six points behind the team expected to finish bottom – Inverness Caledonian Thistle's lot after defeat at Hamilton yesterday – then enlightenment for any manager might prove elusive. That's the position in which Brewster finds himself.

At the end of a grim encounter that was a tie in all but scoreline – the home side just happening to get a penalty Simon Mensing fair enjoyed burying – a chant rose up from the away support for Brewster to f*** off. A couple more defeats and he probably will be told the same, in business speak of course, by his board. With Hearts, Celtic and Dundee United next up, those over-the-edge reverses could well be in offing.

Brewster gave big licks to the "excellent second-half response" of his side in "horrendous conditions" yesterday, but accepted "we need to score" to avoid more horrendous point-dropping. He cursed the needless concession of a penalty that handed the home side a telling advantage but knows it was decisive because he doesn't have a potent striker to his name. "We know we are short, where we are short and it's my job to change it," said the Inverness manager, believed to be chasing two forwards.

It might gall Inverness that promoted Hamilton are growing into their Scottish Premier League status by largely becoming the new them. The latest success for Billy Reid's side was once more a points-scavenging exercise from meagre rations. That used to be a hallmark of the Caledonian club. "We didn't play well in the second half, and maybe they deserved a point," the Hamilton manager said. "I don't know if they pinned us back, but that is our fourth clean sheet in a row at home, we've taken the full 12 points in that time, so we must be doing something right".

Not much to speak of in a disjointed first half. The scouts from 22 English clubs – including Portsmouth and Wolves – believed to be there to assess Hamilton wunderkind James McCarthy would have had little to report from an afternoon in which the other James, McArthur, was more prominent and both weren't averse to brown trouting it under challenges.

Inverness, meanwhile, have been brown trouting it as a team these past two months, since their last victory on November 22. Brewster's briskness in the January's transfer window was supposed to be transforming, with four new players recruited. Two of those, Filippe Morais and Pavel Mihadjuks, appeared yesterday. Initially OK, they seemed to be sucked in to the generally indifferent sort of play that has left Inverness three points adrift of second-bottom Falkirk.

Referee Brian Winter was spot-on with his spot kick after Grant Munro, albeit faintly, caught Joel Thomas seven minutes from the interval. Mensing's conversion high into the net was the one hit of genuine value in the opening half.

On several occasions following the interval, Inverness were seriously luckless after making inroads deep into the Hamilton box. Yet long passages were again as dour as the opening skirmishing. It didn't help that a spectacle-destroying corkscrew wind threatened to give way to a storm. On this evidence, Brewster better batten down the hatches for a force-10 buffeting.

The full article contains 600 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

5:15,

18/01/2009 02:11:41
This result surely signals the end for ICT.

I don't mind when they lose this kind of game, except when I backed them to win
2

Daillyman,

18/01/2009 03:29:20
Was reading KM has more league goals than Skippy.
3

Just an opinion,

USA 18/01/2009 05:19:38
I can only hope the Inverness Board keep faith with Brewster until the last gasp of the season.
No disrespect, but Inverness is not the most inviting place in the Winter!!!
It's tight. Unfortunately one has to go down, but neither Masnager in the bottom four deserve to get the sack.
4

Backofthenet,

18/01/2009 09:14:08
Not the first time McArthur has outperformed McCarthy.
5

Marion Morrison,

18/01/2009 10:04:26
OLD FIRM FANS:

Let's leave the Embra threads and post on the "Ae Fond Kiss and then we Slaver" thread instead.
6

Marion Morrison,

18/01/2009 10:05:01
3. Daily

He's played in more games as well.
7

,

18/01/2009 10:22:14
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
8

Marion Morrison,

18/01/2009 10:38:01
8 Bing I think we tend to forget Brown and Aiden are still young.

£15m is not far off the mark for SB in a few seasons time. First let him get the POTY award this year and lift a treble. Then next season in the CL we'll see a 15m player in action along with Aidihno and Shaun - two more that could be worth big bucks.

Meanwhile Rangers cannae sell anyone.

Singalong....

Broxy Bear, up for sale
Broxy Bear, up for sale

9

Marion Morrison,

18/01/2009 10:38:21
9 More mince from Pundit
10

,

18/01/2009 10:45:53
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
11

Marion Morrison,

18/01/2009 10:56:03
BING OF fans are posting on the "Ae Fond Kiss" thread...

http://sport.scotsman.com/sport/Ae-fond-kiss-is-one.4887901.jp
12

Marion Morrison,

18/01/2009 10:57:28
12

Heard about Chedwyn Michael Evans last night and he's on the way.

A big strapping six footer with good pace and not bad feet. Promising youngster and for £1m great value.
13

Cathcart Boy,

London 18/01/2009 12:55:42
Caley desrve to go down after they were wangled into the Premierleague with substandard stadium facilities. Hamilton have worked away, honest endeavourers with James McCarthy providing class. Falkirk, Motherwell Killie and Saints are too good to go down - and where have we heard that before?

 

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