Udoka Godwin-Malife said that Swindon Town's recent performances have displayed a lack of respect for everyone around the club.

Another poor showing against Doncaster Rovers saw Swindon take no points for the third game in a row as their slide down the table continues.

Godwin-Malife said that he felt that the lack of desire that he and the rest of the players had shown was letting down everyone connected with the team.

He said: "It is a lack of respect for the people that believe in us, the fundamentals of running hard and running with your opponent that we are not doing. That is what it takes to be a professional footballer.

"It is not just disrespecting the manager, it is disrespecting our loved ones, the people that come and watch us every week, and the fans.

"You have got to take that into consideration because this is real life, it is a results business.

"If we are not winning games, it does not matter how good of a player you think you are, the harsh reality is that you will be undermined.

"It was rubbish, the performances have not been good, they have been below par and we just have to be better, we know that as a collective.

"We don't need anyone to tell us, we know when you cross that white line what your responsibilities are.

"We know our responsibilities, we know our roles, and what we have to do, but we have let the opposition come out on top and that is not good enough."

The 23-year-old added that every player and every part of the club needed to be doing a better job to help arrest this slump.

He said: "There is no identifying the main problem area, we have not been good enough, and when I say we, I mean the staff and the players.

"When things are going well, everyone is involved and everyone gets the plaudits, from the people working at the ground, the groundsman, people that work in the kitchen, player liaisons, everyone.

"We have just got to be better. I know that when we cross the white line it is only the players that can do the business, we know that and we are not shying away from that.

"There is no one department on the pitch that has let anyone down, we have not been good enough and we have all had a part to play."