The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Levein praises Wright ‘house’

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Hearts manager Craig Levein has lavished praise on Tommy Wright for building a ‘six-bedroom house’ at St Johnstone when his budget dictated he should only have been able to construct a modest ‘cottage’.

The Tynecastle club will bid to collect their first win over Saints in nine games when the Perth outfit travel to Murrayfiel­d for tomorrow’s Premiershi­p fixture.

Wright, who replaced Steve Lomas in summer 2013, has mastermind­ed three successive top four finishes and led the Perth club to a memorable 2014 Scottish Cup triumph.

Former Scotland manager Levein admits he has been immensely impressed by how the Northern Irishman has constantly overachiev­ed at a club who struggle to attract crowds in excess of 5,000.

He said: “He is fantastic. St Johnstone, for me, are like Dunfermlin­e, Falkirk, Raith Rovers and all those other clubs who are languishin­g in lower leagues. And I put that down to Tommy.

“The crowds at St Johnstone are on a par with the other teams I have mentioned but the fact that he is at St Johnstone means they have been in the top six year on year on year and in Europe year on year.

“Okay, there’s been a really good couple of managers before him, admittedly, and they’ve maybe built the foundation­s.

“But he’s certainly put up a sixbedroom house rather than a cottage.

“One of the big things about them is their determinat­ion and their grit and their ability to win points when they are not at their best.

“Tommy has outdone anybody with regard to having his team playing above a level that possibly the budget would dictate.”

Levein’s only concern for Wright is that he does not become a victim of his own success, and has cited Alan Curbishley’s departure at Charlton in 2006 as a warning to any greedy supporters.

He added: “I think he’s done a remarkable job.

“The danger is expectatio­ns, he’s done so many good things in a period of time and it’s really difficult to keep that going.

“If I was to give advice to any young manager; whatever league you’re in, finish ninth.

“Next year finish eighth, then seventh, then sixth and it keeps you in a job. When I speak about this, my mind always goes back to Alan Curbishley at Charlton.

“He took them up through the leagues to the Premier League, they finished in the top half and they got rid of him because they needed somebody to take them to the next level, which was two divisions below the one they were in.

“When you get up there and are constantly fighting against the odds and the longer you stay up there, people take it for granted.

“That’s something that’s grossly unfair. At some clubs the expectatio­n level is not always realistic.”

 ??  ?? Hearts boss Craig Levein is impressed with Tommy Wright’s work at St Johnstone.
Hearts boss Craig Levein is impressed with Tommy Wright’s work at St Johnstone.

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