Glasgow Times

Ross forced to round up fringe men

Eleven players out at Hibs as manager rethinks squad

- DARREN JOHNSTONE

HIBS V FORFAR

HIBERNIAN head coach Jack Ross admits he is struggling to cobble a team together for tonight’s Betfred Cup clash at Forfar after being left with only 13 outfield players.

The Leith outfit will be missing 11 members of the first team for their penultimat­e Group B clash due to a range of issues.

Joe Newell, Lewis Stevenson, Paul Hanlon, Jamie Murphy and Drew Wright are all injured, while Scott Allan remains unavailabl­e due to a health issue.

Josh Doig is also absent as he continues to self- isolate following Scotland under- 19 boss Billy Stark’s positive

Covid- 19 test, with Ryan Porteous, Paul McGinn, Ofir Marciano and Alex Gogic on internatio­nal duty.

Ross is hopeful his crippling personnel issues will improve ahead of Saturday’s Premiershi­p trip to Ross County but concedes he is down to the bare bones for this evening’s clash at Station Park.

Ross said: “We’ll travel with 13 outfield players and two goalkeeper­s – so 15 in total.

“We’ve got 11 first team players ruled out for the game.

“Scott Allan is still unavailabl­e; Joe, Lewis, Paul, Jamie and Drew are injured.

“Josh Doig is isolating and then the others, Ryan Porteous, Paul McGinn, Ofir Marciano and Alex Gogic are on internatio­nal duty.

“For Saturday, the internatio­nal ones will be back and I would expect two

or three of the injured guys to be available. We’ll see how the week pans out.”

With Covid- 19 cases soaring around the globe, Ross is also keeping his fingers crossed that his internatio­nal players do not contract the virus or unwittingl­y come into contact with anyone who has it.

Ross, however, has no concerns over goalkeeper Ofir Marciano despite Celtic midfielder and Israel internatio­nal team Nir Bitton testing positive.

He added: “It’s probably become more of a worry on a weekly or bi- weekly basis for coaches because of the frequency in which we’re tested.

“And because infection rates have obviously risen in the general population it is remiss to think that won’t happen through all walks of life.

“I still enjoy the message that pops through from Nathan [ Ring], our head of medical, when it tells you all swabs are negative.

“It’s part of the job I thought I would not have to look at.

“I think maybe [ goalkeeper coach] Craig Samson spoke to Ofir when the news came through about Nir’s positive test. I’m pretty relaxed about stuff like that.

“Ofir is a mature, intelligen­t man and there is nothing you can do about it now.”

Hibs striker Jamie Gullan, meanwhile, admits he is grateful to Christian Doidge and Kevin Nisbet for passing on tips, even though he is trying to dislodge one of them in the starting line- up

Gullan, who climbed off the bench to net in Saturday’s 2- 1 victory at Cove Rangers, said: “I’m learning a lot from them.

“They actually come to me to give me advice, even if I don’t ask for it they still come and speak to me about my game.

“It is really good to work with the two of them, they bring different qualities to the game so I can learn plenty off them.”

 ??  ?? Jack Ross oversees Hibs first- team training ahead of their group stage game against Forfar tonight
Jack Ross oversees Hibs first- team training ahead of their group stage game against Forfar tonight

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