Saints move up Premiership
Saint Johnstone up to joint 4th in the table after 1-0 win over Inverness
Chris Kane's 84th-minute strike gave St Johnstone a narrow but welcome 1-0 win over Inverness in their Ladbrokes Premiership clash at McDiarmid Park.
After a turgid first half, Caley captain Gary Warren was sent off in the 67th minute after conceding a penalty but goalkeeper Owain Fon Williams dived low to block David Wotherspoon's spot-kick with the Saints midfielder missing the target from the rebound.
The 10-man visitors looked to be holding out for a point but when Darnell Fisher's cross was deflected to the back post with the Highlanders unable to clear, Kane knocked the ball into the net from close range
It was only Saints' second win in 14 games but it moved them level on points with fourth-placed Ross County, with Wotherspoon probably the most relieved man in the ground.
A cold night, a poor pitch and a paltry attendance of 2157 - Saints' lowest of the season - did little to enhance the fixture, albeit there was almost an Inverness goal in the first minute.
Wing-back Liam Polworth's whipped-in cross from the right was met at the back post by forward Jordan Roberts but he could not get his close-range header on target.
Not that the near miss sparked the game into life. It was another 10 minutes of mainly drudgery before the next near miss, in relative terms, when Fisher drove just over the crossbar from distance.
In the 16th minute, after St Johnstone left-back Tom Scobbie tripped Inverness midfielder Ross Draper 25 yards from goal, Iain Vigurs curled the free-kick just over the bar.
The match failed to improve.
Just before the interval, as the Perth side stepped up the tempo, Kane headed a Fisher cross tamely past the post before Fon Williams punched a Simon Lappin free-kick behind with Saints defender Joe Shaughnessy heading Danny Swanson's resultant corner straight at the Inverness keeper.
Players crashed into tackles but shooting remained awry in the second half, evidenced by Polworth's angled drive in the 58th minute which flew over.
At the other end, Wotherspoon had two efforts deflected wide for corners which unsurprisingly came to nothing.
When Warren, booked earlier for a foul on Lappin, was sent packing for a trip on Swanson inside the penalty area, it gave the home side a great chance to break the deadlock.
However, Fon Williams dived to his right to parry Wotherspoon's spot-kick with the Saints scrambling the rebound wide.
Down to 10 men, Inverness began to look tired and retreated to the edge of their own box as St Johnstone pressed in the final stages,with four minutes remaining their defence was at last breached by Kane for Saints' winner.
St Johnstone boss Tommy Wright asked for his side to be judged in Arsene Wenger fashion following their narrow but welcome 1-0 Ladbrokes Premiership win over Inverness at McDiarmid Park.
After a turgid first half, Caley captain Gary Warren was sent off in the 67th minute after conceding a penalty for a foul on Danny Swanson but goalkeeper Owain Fon Williams dived low to block David Wotherspoon's spot-kick.
However, Chris Kane's 84th-minute strike gave the home side only their second win in 14 games which took them level on points with fourth-placed Ross County.
Asked if it was the break his side needed, the Northern Irishman said: It is difficult, because of the run you are on, people outside get very negative about your position. But you would be more concerned if we were in 10th place in the run we are in but we were fourth, fifth and sixth.
So we are two points worse off than we were last year. Arsene Wenger is a wise man. Judge people at the end of the season. I think people are too quick to judge us. There is a long way to go. We are happy tonight, we are not getting carried away.
We know and everyone knows this league is crazy this year and if we get top six we deserve to be in the top six but if we fail it won't be through lack of effort and desire.''
Inverness manager John Hughes claimed Warren's sending-off for picking up a second yellow card - he was booked earlier for a foul on Simon Lappin – changed the game.
He said: Yes, that was it. I don't think there was much in the game before that. The sending off certainly advantaged St Johnstone. Our frustration was when we saved the penalty. You are saying 'down to 10 men, come on, hang on in there, let's try to get something from the game'. Then something happens when you go down to 10 men that shouldn't happen. Everyone sits back and invites it on top of you. To lose it the way we lost it, a toe-poke at the back post...but that's football, you can't feel sorry for yourself.''