Dundee United return to Tannadice Park on Tuesday night with Livingston in town for a Premiership meeting that arrives with plenty of recent history attached. The sides have already produced a tight, high-scoring contest this month, and another close encounter feels likely.
With kick-off at 19:45 BST in Round 37, the fixture matters for more than just the points on offer. Both clubs arrive with mixed momentum, and the way this one unfolds may say as much about their current direction as the result itself.
Look at our Data and Stats for Dundee United vs Livingston
Why it matters
For Dundee United, this is a chance to steady themselves after a difficult run away from home and reassert control on familiar ground. Their recent home wins have shown they can still impose themselves, but the defeats to Aberdeen, Kilmarnock and Rangers have underlined how fragile their away form has been.
Livingston, meanwhile, come into the game with a point to prove after a mixed sequence that has included draws, a win at St. Mirren and a heavy defeat to Dundee. Having already been edged 3-2 by Dundee United in the reverse meeting, they will see this as an opportunity to show they can respond in a fixture that has become increasingly competitive.
The wider significance lies in the pattern of the campaign: both teams have been involved in open, changeable matches rather than controlled, low-event contests. That makes this meeting important not just for the table, but for the tone it sets heading into the closing stages of the season.
Form picture
Dundee United’s recent league form has been uneven, with three defeats in their last five and only one of those losses coming at home. The 3-0 win over Dundee stands out as the clearest sign of their best level, while the 3-2 victory over Livingston showed they can still find enough attacking rhythm to win a lively contest.
The concern for Dundee United is that their defeats have tended to come with goals conceded in clusters. The 0-2 loss to Aberdeen and 0-3 defeat to Kilmarnock were both controlled setbacks, while the 2-4 reverse against Rangers suggested they can be stretched when the game opens up.
Livingston’s recent league results tell a similar story of inconsistency, but with a slightly steadier edge. They beat St. Mirren away, drew with Aberdeen and Hearts, and were only narrowly beaten by Dundee United, which suggests they remain competitive even when not at their sharpest.
At the same time, Livingston’s 0-3 defeat to Dundee showed the limits of their resilience when they fall behind early or lose control of the middle of the pitch. Their form points to a side capable of staying in games, but not always of dictating them.
Key storyline
The main tactical theme is likely to be whether Dundee United can turn home pressure into territory and chances before Livingston settle into shape. The previous meeting between the sides was open and decisive in moments, and both teams have shown enough attacking intent to suggest this will not be a passive contest.
Livingston’s recent use of both a 4-2-3-1 and a 3-4-2-1 points to a side that can adapt, but also one that may spend long spells without the ball. Dundee United’s own recent shapes, including 3-4-2-1 and 3-4-3, suggest they are comfortable pushing numbers forward, which raises the likelihood of a game decided by transitions and second balls rather than long periods of control.
Team news
Dundee United are expected to be without Amar Fatah because of a hamstring injury, which removes one attacking option from the squad. That may encourage a fairly settled front line, with the predicted shape again leaning towards a back three and energetic wide support.
The likely Dundee United XI is built around Dave Richards in goal, a three-man defence of Iurie Iovu, Krisztián Keresztes and Ross Graham, and a midfield unit that includes Emmanuel Agyei, Ryan Strain, Vicko Sevelj and Will Ferry. In attack, Dario Naamo, N. Farrugia and Zachary Sapsford are expected to lead the line, giving them pace and movement in the final third.
Livingston have no reported injuries this season, which gives them a cleaner selection picture. Their recent line-ups suggest flexibility between a back four and a back three, but the expected team points towards a familiar core with Jérôme Prior behind Brooklyn Kabongolo, Cammy Kerr, Danny Finlayson and Danny Wilson, while Barrie McKay, Lewis Smith, Macaulay Tait, Mohamad Sylla and Scott Pittman support Joel Nouble.
Tactical battle
The key battle should come in the spaces behind Livingston’s midfield line, where Dundee United will try to create overloads and force the visitors’ defence into repeated decisions. If the home side can get their wide players involved early, Livingston may be pushed deeper than they would like.
At the other end, Livingston’s best route may be to stay compact and break quickly through Joel Nouble, with support from the midfield runners around him. That would make the first goal especially important, because both teams have shown they can become more open once the game starts to stretch.
Recent meetings
The recent head-to-head record has been lively and competitive, with Dundee United winning the last two meetings 3-2 and 3-1, while the sides also drew 1-1 earlier in the season. The pattern suggests goals are likely, and that neither team has been able to establish complete control in this fixture.
Reporter’s view
This feels like a match that may be decided by which side handles the first half better rather than by sustained dominance. Dundee United have the stronger recent home reference points, but Livingston’s ability to stay in games and adapt their shape means the visitors should not be written off.
The most likely script is an open contest with chances at both ends, especially if Dundee United commit bodies forward and Livingston find space to counter. Given the recent meetings and both teams’ form, another narrow result looks more probable than a comfortable one.
Prediction
A tight, high-scoring game looks likely, with Dundee United just edging it again at Tannadice.

