Aberdeen manager Derek McInnes was delighted by his side's character after they came back from a goal down with 10 men to win 3-2 at Ross County.

The Dons were a man down for over an hour after Mark Reynolds' dismissal and within seconds of that Ian McShane had put the Dingwall side ahead.

But Adam Rooney levelled before a brace from Shay Logan gave the Dons a 3-1 cushion, and although McShane pulled one back the visitors held on to keep the pressure on Ladbrokes Premiership leaders Celtic.

McInnes said: "I thought we played a lot of good stuff - our initial start to the game was excellent, it was one-way traffic. I don't think Scott Brown touched the ball in the first 10, 15 minutes.

"The response was excellent from the players to go 2-1 up - it gave us something to hold on to.

"I thought we were comfortable for the majority of the second half. The third goal said everything - my left-back, who is high up the park, crossing for my right-back to score."

Ross County manager Jim McIntyre rued his side's missed chances.

"I'm disappointed we didn't make more of the chances we created. We got in some great areas," he said.

"Aberdeen started better and put us under pressure but we defended well and made some fantastic opportunities and you have to take them. I think that was the difference in the game today, Aberdeen were ruthless when they got into the key areas and we weren't."

McIntyre also felt County should have been awarded a penalty early on when McShane appeared to be fouled by Ash Taylor in the box in the 20th minute.

He said: "It's a penalty, the referee explained it was a good advantage. It should have been given and we failed to take the advantage - it was the wrong decision.

"I felt we gave the ball away too often in the early stages. After that we got a foothold in the game and created chances. That was the key frustrations today, getting into the right areas, creating chances but not finishing them off."