St Mirren v Livingston: Team newspublished at 00:08 BST 25 April
00:08 BST 25 April
Image source, SNS
St Mirren will have either 17-year-old Grant Tamosevicius, who has signed a contract extension after making his debut in Sunday's Scottish Cup semi-final defeat by Celtic, or Ross Sinclair, who has arrived on a seven-day emergency loan from St Johnstone, in goal against Livingston.
It follows Sunday's injury to Ryan Mullen, while Shamal George already sidelined.
Malik Dijksteel, Keanu Baccus and Marcus Fraser are out for the season, but forward Dan Nlundulu could be back.
Livingston forwards Connor McLennan and Jeremy Bokila are still out, but midfielder Aidan Denholm is closer to featuring after recovering a long-term hamstring injury.
Bartley tells Livi to focus on three points as relegation loomspublished at 19:09 BST 24 April
19:09 BST 24 April
Image source, SNS
Marvin Bartley insists Livingston's focus will be only on three points when they travel to St Mirren on Saturday with relegation staring them in the face.
With five post-split Premiership fixtures remaining, Livi are bottom of the table, 12 points behind Kilmarnock and 14 behind the Buddies.
The West Lothian side, who have only one league win this season, could find themselves relegated this weekend if results do not go their way but manager Bartley stressed the need to keep fighting.
He said: "We definitely understand the situation we're in. The boys and the staff and I understand that. You have to go and play the 90 minutes.
"I think if you start thinking of permutations of what could happen, it adds pressure. We're already in a real difficult position, which we understand.
"So we have to go and put our best foot forward and like I said, we understand the pressure and the permutations of things.
"But we'll just be playing the 90 minutes, not worrying about anything else. Focus on what you can control which is the game against St Mirren.
"In terms of pressure, I was very strange in a sense where I enjoyed the pressure. I would say to the players to thrive underneath it.
"There's a lot bigger pressures in life than you feel as a footballer, going out there to fight for three points is a privileged position.
"That's what I'll be saying to my players because it's only natural that you're going feel some sort of pressure and some sort of nerves.
"It's about putting that into a positive energy in way it can help you perform, rather than fearing it."
St Mirren v Livingston: Pick of the statspublished at 09:55 BST 24 April
09:55 BST 24 April
Image source, SNS
St Mirren have lost just one of their past 16 Scottish Premiership meetings with Livingston (W7 D8), going down 1-0 away from home in February 2024.
Livingston won their first-ever Premiership visit to St Mirren 2-0 in August 2018, but have since failed to win 10 such trips in the competition (D4 L6), losing their past four in a row and failing to score in their latest three.
Depending on Kilmarnock's result at Aberdeen, Livingston could be relegated this weekend should they fail to beat St Mirren. Since the Premiership rebranded in 2013, they would be only the second newly-promoted side to be relegated from the division, after Dundee in 2021-22.
St Mirren haven't won their first game after the Premiership split in any of their past five seasons (D1 L4), although their last win on matchday 34 in the competition came against Livingston in 2018-19 (3-1).
Livingston have dropped 25 points from winning positions in the Premiership this season; since the competition's rebrand in 2013, the record in a single campaign is 28 by Hamilton in 2017-18 and Dundee in 2024-25.
Denholm ready to put injury frustration behind himpublished at 17:01 BST 23 April
17:01 BST 23 April
Image source, SNS
Aidan Denholm recalled the sheer frustration of a second debilitating injury as he gets set to resume his Livingston career following an eight-month absence.
After signing from Hearts last August, the 22-year-old midfielder sustained a hamstring injury on his debut against Kelty Hearts in the League Cup and went under the knife for a second time, after suffering a similar injury playing on loan at Ross County from the Jambos, which kept him out for the second half of last season.
Prior to Saturday's trip to St Mirren, the first of the five post-split Premiership fixtures and where Livi could officially be relegated if results go against them, fit-again Denholm summed up his season to date.
"Probably one word – frustration," he said.
"Signing here to kick on in my career as obviously I got injured on loan at Ross County and then first game it happens again, which is incredibly frustrating.
"But this rehab has been a lot smoother and I've not had any hiccups so far, touch wood. The club's been different class for me and supported me through it.
"It's not easy having two surgeries at the age of 22. Before then I was pretty fit and never had any real injuries, so the season has been pretty frustrating and watching the boys was even harder.
"Watching the boys train when you're in a leg brace and can't put your leg straight.
"I don't think anyone can play down that surgery is probably the hardest part, you can't do anything, you're bed-bound. I was in a brace for eight weeks. You can't straighten your leg.
"It was incredibly tough the second time around. My family have all been through it as well so it's not just me. They've had to deal with my moods and my girlfriend as well, she's had to put up with me."
Livi are bottom of the table, 12 points behind Kilmarnock and 14 behind St Mirren.
Denholm said: "It's been a difficult season for me personally and for the club.
"But we're not a million miles away and it's not done yet, so the approach is we go there and try to get three points."
'Tamm has barely featured in awful squad'published at 18:21 BST 22 April
18:21 BST 22 April
We asked for your views on which player has been Livingston's biggest disappointment this season.
Here are some of your comments:
Ben: Alex Tamm. Another in a long list of Martindale signings that plays a handful of minutes, then never to be seen again. He did come with international experience, and a good age, but has barely featured in an awful squad. It's a good thing David Martindale isn't tasked with rebuilding the squad next season isn't it…
Derek: There's been a few disappointing performers, especially in the forward areas. I wouldn't like to single anyone out for this as the whole team really haven't got going this season, I'd tend to blame the board for not acting on the managerial change sooner when it was clear and obvious that the tactics weren't working.
Goalkeeper Prior tipped for Livingston player of the yearpublished at 12:48 BST 16 April
12:48 BST 16 April
Image source, SNS
We asked for your views on Livingston's player of the season.
Here's what some of you said:
Brian: My player of the year is Scott Pittman. Always get 100 per cent from Scott, no matter who he is playing against. He is really Mr Livingston and I think naming a stand after him would not be over the top.
Craig: Jerome Prior has been excellent in goal despite the poor results. Lewis Smith has been the best outfield player by a country mile.
Malcolm: Livingston player of the year has to be Stevie May. Guaranteed to put in 110 per cent when he's on the pitch. If we're including loan players, he's closely followed by Macaulay Tait.
Derek: There's only really been one stand out performer for me and that's goalkeeper Prior. The guy has been excellent in a very poor, under-performing team. We'll be very, very lucky to see him at Livi next season.
Smith thriving but Livi 'dead in the water'published at 16:22 BST 14 April
16:22 BST 14 April
Stuart Barrie Fan writer
Can we stop the season now, please?
I'm not sure there's any point pretending otherwise - we are relegated. Players and officials have to stay positive and show a path forward, but the reality is we are dead in the water.
The game against United pretty much sums up our season. We were second best for much of the first half, then played well for large parts of the second.
We could have won it and should have taken at least a point, but somehow managed to give away a daft penalty (quite a harsh decision) and walk away with nothing.
We may as well enjoy Lewis Smith while we can, as our best attacking threat will surely move on to another Premiership club when the axe falls on us.
The winger was our main attacking outlet again and is thriving under Marvin Bartley. His two goals got us right back into this game, but once again we shot ourselves in the foot.
The sad fact is after 33 games, we have won only one game - which was way back in August. We have drawn 16 games, conceded 66 goals and scored 35, leaving us with a paltry 16 points.
Weirdly, there's still a lot I've enjoyed. We've played well in spells and have been desperately unlucky not to get more points on the board.
In the dreadful 23-24 season when we were last relegated, we somehow amassed 25 points with five wins and 10 draws.
Even Carol Vorderman couldn't find a way to make the numbers stack up for us to survive this time.
I'd be quite happy to give up on this season and start planning for the next. I know there are lots of contractual shenanigans ahead, but we should already know who we have for next season and start working on a system to get us straight back up.
There's no point playing the retirement contingent or the players who have been no better than what we already had from January. It's time to get things in place for next season and face the reality of where we'll be.
'You can't take a risk' - Sportscene analyse United's decisive penaltypublished at 15:26 BST 13 April
15:26 BST 13 April
Media caption,
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."
Who makes BBC's Premiership team of the week?published at 09:19 BST 13 April
09:19 BST 13 April
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.
Bartley insists Livingston will fight to retain Premiership statuspublished at 17:03 BST 12 April
17:03 BST 12 April
Image source, SNS
Marvin Bartley insists no-one at Livingston is ready to give up on retaining their Premiership status.
The rock bottom Lions stunned Dundee United at Tannadice when they took a 2-1 lead thanks to a Lewis Smith second-half double but they ultimately lost the game 3-2.
The result means Livingston are now 12 points adrift of 11th-placed Kilmarnock with just five games to go and 15 points left to play for.
However, boss Bartley is adamant the players will not be running up the white flag just yet.
The 39-year-old said: "They haven't given up and we won't allow them to give up.
"There were harsh words spoken at half-time because we needed a reaction from some individuals.
"Smithy was one of them because I didn't think he had the best of first halves.
"He got us 2-1 up but we have to be better in those moments afterwards."
Bartley added: "The manner of the goals, even the first goal, we throw ourselves to the floor and I'm massive on that not happening.
"The boys know it, we let him inside and then it goes through someone's legs.
"Just stand up and let the ball hit you, it's just a bit of leather with some air in it so you have to be braver in those situations."
Dundee United 3-2 Livingston: What Marvin Bartley saidpublished at 18:32 BST 11 April
18:32 BST 11 April
Image source, SNS
Livingston manager Marvin Bartley told the club's social media account:
"It's a really tough one, especially with the manner of the goals we conceded today. It's difficult to take.
"I don't think Dundee United had to do too much today to score other than be a little bit stronger and a little bit more aggressive to get to the ball.
"Some stern words were said at half time and some tactical changes and I was happy with their reaction but if you concede three goals away from home it's almost impossible to get anything out of games.
"I felt the boys gave an awful lot today. They're hurting and the staff are as well, it's a hard one to take."
Dundee United 3-2 Livingston: Have your saypublished at 18:10 BST 11 April
18:10 BST 11 April
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.
Dundee United v Livingston: Team newspublished at 23:11 BST 10 April
23:11 BST 10 April
Image source, SNS
Dundee United are without goalkeeper Ashley Maynard-Brewer, winger Kristijan Trapanovski and midfielder Isaac Pappoe for the rest of the season.
Defender Brooklyn Kabongolo returns from suspension for Livingston while midfielder Macaulay Tait is available again after being unable to face parent club Hearts.
Forward Connor McLennan is still out, but midfielder Aidan Denholm is on the mend after a long-term hamstring injury.
Livingston haven't given up on survival - Maypublished at 17:25 BST 10 April
17:25 BST 10 April
Image source, SNS
Livingston forward Stevie May insists the team have not accepted relegation is certain but knows they have to start winning games to survive.
With six games to play, the team are bottom of the Premiership, 11 points behind Kilmarnock, and look destined for a quick return to the Championship one year after promotion.
Manager Marvin Bartley has overseen an upturn in performances since succeeding David Martindale as manager and have drawn five of their last six games, and May believes that shows encouraging signs but more is needed to make a great escape.
"Obviously, ideally, we would have turned some of those draws into wins,"the veteran attacker said ahead of his side's trip to face Dundee United. "I think some performances have been there.
"We've probably said throughout the whole season that we've been quite close but not quite there but it's something to build on.
"We're still believing in here. If we can look at this weekend, get a result and hopefully results go our way and try and put a bit of pressure on.
"It's obviously unlikely for people looking in, but we've still got a chance and we've got to give it everything we can this weekend.
"It's a strange one in the sense that we've actually had a lot of joy against the big teams this year.
"I can't really understand how we've not managed to put more points on the board. It's not as if we've been well beaten every game.
"A lot of goals at bad times in games have killed us and probably stopped us going on a positive run.
"Obviously we are in a little unbeaten run now, but we're at a position where unbeaten is not going to get us out of anything.
"It needs to be a winning run and that's what we are going to try and put together and finish the season as strong as possible and see where we lie."
Bartley on contract latest, split fixtures & not downing toolspublished at 16:34 BST 9 April
16:34 BST 9 April
Brian McLauchlin BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter
Image source, SNS
Livingston boss Marvin Bartley has been speaking to the media as his side prepare to travel to Dundee United in the Scottish Premiership on Saturday.
Here are the main points:
Bartley says there was "nothing surprising" about their post-split fixtures but feels "we were probably due four home games and one away and somehow we've ended up with two home and three away".
The Livi boss is "very, very comfortable" with the situation surrounding his contract, which expires at the end of the season, adding: "Football always finds a way of working itself out."
There are players who will be out of contract in the summer and Bartley admits "they haven't had talks" yet, but stresses that, just like him and his coaching staff, they are all still "working away".
Livingston are currently bottom of the Premiership, 11 points behind Kilmarnock in 11th with six games to go, but Bartley stresses "the attitude has been top class" from his players.
The Livi boss referenced the 2-2 draw against Hearts at the weekend where, having led the game, they found themselves 1-0 down. He admitted "it would have been easy for us to chuck it" at that point.
He insists "we won't allow players to come off it or show any attitude other than 100 per cent" and stresses "if they do that, they just won't be in the squad".
Livi have only won one game, back in August, and Bartley "understands" the situation the club are in "is because we haven't won enough games".
Team news: Bartley says everyone is OK. Both Brooklyn Kabangolo, who returns from suspension, and Macaulay Tait will be back in the squad for the trip to Tannadice.
Dundee Utd v Livingston: Pick of the statspublished at 13:44 BST 9 April
13:44 BST 9 April
Image source, SNS
Dundee United and Livingston have dropped the joint-most points from winning positions in the Scottish Premiership this season, with 22 each. Dundee United, though, are joint-leaders for points gained from a losing position (13, level with Celtic).
Livingston have 16 points from 32 league games this season; the only side to have 16 or fewer after 33 games when the division splits in the Scottish top flight under its current format (since 2000-01) were Livingston themselves in 2005-06 (15).
Dundee United have won both of their last two home league games, and could win three in a row in the Scottish Premiership for the first time since October 2021.
After their 3-1 defeat in December, Livingston could lose back-to-back top-flight meetings with Dundee United for the first time since February 2005.
Dundee United have won both of their last two Scottish Premiership games against newly promoted opponents, last winning three in a row in January 2015.
'Hearts had us on the ropes, but couldn't put us down'published at 09:49 BST 7 April
09:49 BST 7 April
Stuart Barrie Fan writer
This game had a bit of everything, including all four seasons in 90 minutes.
It is another draw when we desperately need wins, but it is such an important point. We scored two goals against this season's long-standing league leaders and showed we are a good team.
In the first half, we flew out of the blocks and got a great goal, but for long periods it was tough going.
Hearts had us on the ropes, but couldn't put us down.
We showed fantastic resilience, and at times we also played some really neat football. We moved the ball quickly when we needed to, and for anyone watching this game on television, they would have surely found it entertaining too. I certainly did.
Hats off to the Jambos, they came through in huge numbers and made a great noise too. I don't mind opposition teams filling our stands; it's cash in the bank, and I genuinely think the atmosphere helps lift our players, too.
That said, the noisy visitors from the capital had an influence on the referee, I felt.
He made some odd decisions for me, not least having to get VAR to save his blushes for missing an obvious wrestling move for Hearts' red card.
At the end of the day, we are a point better off, a point closer to Kilmarnock, but it still feels like it's too far a bridge to cross to get out of the relegation mire.
It does show we have improved under Marvin Bartley, and if we can keep the majority of his squad, we should have a right good go in the Championship when the inevitable drop happens.
Until then, I'd like to enjoy more games like this, matches where we go for it and actually win a game.
I can take relegation, but it would be terrible to only win one game all season.
If the remaining matches are played as we did for this one, then we may just get that highly elusive win.