Under 19s boss Gordon Young couldn’t hide his disappointment after his side crashed to a disappointing home defeat this afternoon.
An unusually off-colour Motherwell never really got into top gear despite dominating possession and creating a number of good chances.
A frustrating afternoon was epitomised by Stevie Hetherington’s 43rd minute penalty miss and two Keiran McGachie efforts that were denied by the frame of the goal.
A poor day at the office then and Young was visibly agitated by the sides’ first defeat in almost two months.
“If I had hair I would pull it out”, joked Young.
“No, in all seriousness, I get so frustrated. I told them in the dressing room after the match that they are a great team to watch. Individually and collectively, we keep the ball very well and our patterns of play are excellent but we are only one mistake away from losing.
“We have got to capitalise on the amount of possession we have; we have got to be more cutting, more ruthless and we have got to have more self belief.”
Young watched on from the sidelines as ‘Well passed up a number of chances, much like last week’s Scottish FA Youth Cup clash with Arbtoath.
[pullquote]We have got to capitalise on the amount of possession we have; we have got to be more cutting, more ruthless and we have got to have more self-belief.”[/pullquote]
And the lack of a finish was punished when the Steelmen conceded a sloppy goal after twelve minutes much to the anger of the home bench.
Young continued: “We started very well and had three early chances, including hitting the post, a great ball across the face and a back post header.
“At that point, I felt it was only a matter of time before we got ourselves in front. We lost our way slightly and I can’t hide my disappointment at the manner in which we lost our goal. It was extremely uncharacteristic.
“Yes, there was some bad luck involved too but we have got to look deeper than that, we are much better than what we showed there. If we stop the attack at source, if we act more professionally and more maturely, and those responsible know who I am talking about, then we don’t lose that goal.
“I get down when we underperform, particularly when the manager is watching. It’s like they’ve let an opportunity go. Everyone is probably getting bored with me saying it but, win, lose or draw, individual performances and progression towards the first-team is the most important thing.
“There is a fine line; on another day things may have been completely different. We dominated and they proved little threat, particularly in the second half. But we spoke before hand about consistency over complacency; the top sports men and woman are at their best all the time and we have to strive for that.”