Motherwell might not win the title this season, but The Steelmen might be the best footballing side in the Scottish Premiership right now.
Scottish football has waited decades for a season like this one. In a country dominated by two teams, four teams are being talked about as title challengers. Leaders Hearts have been the defining story of the Scottish Premiership so far, and rightly so. Motherwell, however, deserve a spotlight of their own.
Jens Berthel Askou’s team probably won’t win the title. 10 points might be too much ground to make up even if Motherwell hold a game in-hand over two of the three teams above them. That the title question is even being asked of them, though, shows how far they have come under their Danish manager.

Nobody in Scotland had heard of Berthel Askou when he was appointed at Fir Park last summer. The former defender arrived at Motherwell having been assistant manager at Sparta Prague and FC København, but quickly imposed himself on a team that hadn’t finished in the top half for four seasons.
Only Celtic are averaging a higher possession share per match in the Scottish Premiership this season than Motherwell. This level of control helps The Steelmen construct attacking opportunities in a repeatable way, but also protects the defence – Motherwell boast the second-lowest Expected Goals Conceded in the division.
Berthel Askou wants his side to play with the ball and has imposed an ideology that has made Motherwell the most dynamic, modern team in the country. As if this wasn’t impressive enough, the Dane has done this with one of the smallest budgets of any Scottish Premiership manager.

Tawanda Maswanhise has been a revelation. The Zimbabwean is the Scottish Premiership’s top scorer with 16 goals in 25 games after netting only six times for Motherwell last season. Maswanhise’s willingness to get in behind gives The Steelman a valuable element of unpredictability, offsetting their possession-heavy approach.
Elliot Watt and Elijah Just, both signed for nothing last summer, have also thrived at Fir Park this season, but Berthel Askou’s biggest success has been in drawing more quality out of the players he inherited as Motherwell manager. The Dane has lifted standards across the board at the club.

Stephen O’Donnell and Paul McGinn are two notable examples of this. While respected as experienced performers at Scottish Premiership level, nobody expected the pair to reach the sort of standard Berthel Askou has taken them to this season. O’Donnell in particular has caught the eye. The 33-year-old’s playing like prime Cafu.
It is the unfortunate reality of modern football that Berthel Askou won’t be at Motherwell for long. Celtic fans are openly discussing the possibility of the Dane taking over from Martin O’Neill at the end of the season. Clubs in Europe’s Big Five leagues are surely monitoring his progress as well.
Everything about Berthel Askou is impressive. He speaks with authority without ever raising his voice. Communication has been a key part of his success. Players and fans hang on his every calm and composed word. Even as outsiders have started talking about Motherwell as potential title challengers, the Dane has kept his cool.

“I know there’s been a lot of talk about us being in a title race now,” he said. “In terms of being in a race, racing with other clubs, there needs to be some conditions that are more or less the same. And we just compete in a totally different league, even though we’re in the same football league.
“There are some circumstances that the other teams above us have in their hands that we don’t have, and that’s why it’s irrelevant for us to discuss that question or to approach it internally or externally. What’s important is that we’re developing and we’re growing as a club, and that we are aware of where we need to grow as a club.”
Motherwell have lost just once in their last 20 league games, and that was away to Rangers when the Ibrox side were fortunate to nick a narrow 1-0 victory. The novelty of seeing an underdog like Motherwell out-play one of Scotland’s Big Two on their own patch still hasn’t worn off even as The Steelmen have made a habit of it.
If Motherwell are to have any realistic hope of winning the Scottish title for the first time since 1932, three points away to Celtic on 14th March will be required. A win against table-toppers Hearts in the final round of fixtures before ‘The Split’ would also be a huge boost to their cause.
Ultimately, this might prove beyond Berthal Askou and his players, but Motherwell’s story still deserves to be told in a season that could be remembered for Hearts’ heroics. At the very least, this could be the start of a managerial career destined for the top. What Berthal Askou has done isn’t normal.
(Images from IMAGO)
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