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Levein adamant he would have kept Hearts in top tier

- IAIN COLLIN

CRAIG LEVEIN is adamant Hearts would not have been relegated from the Premiershi­p had he still been manager, and has blamed a lengthy injury list for the poor results he oversaw.

The former Scotland manager was axed last October with the Tynecastle outfit ahead of 12th-placed St Mirren on goal difference.

Hearts had won only one of their first 11 games of the season after also wrapping up the previous campaign with two victories from 14 outings.

Levein was hampered by a string of injuries to key players such as Christophe Berra, Steven Naismith, John Souttar, Peter Haring, Michael Smith and Uche Ikpeazu in that time.

Current manager Daniel Stendel did not fare much better, winning only two league games before football was postponed in March because of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

And, with Hearts having had the worst points-per-game ratio at the basement – four points adrift of safety – the Gorgie side have subsequent­ly been consigned to the Championsh­ip for next term.

However, Levein, who remained in a backroom role at Hearts until the start of this month, having also served as director of football, is confident he would have led the team higher up the table.

He said: “It depends who you speak to, doesn’t it? Some people think it’s all my fault.

“I can’t put my hands up and say that I’m not responsibl­e in any way, shape or form because at the start of the season obviously we struggled.

“I could sit here and talk about the number of important players we had injured, but ultimately you’re judged by your results.

“I do make a genuine case that I do feel that if I’d stayed in place then we wouldn’t have been in the league position that we were in because we had good players coming back from injury.

“Austin [MacPhee] had a go at it [as caretaker] and it didn’t work for him.

“You could argue Daniel’s had a go at it and it’s not particular­ly worked for him either. I think the same problems still existed.

“I had enough faith in my ability and that once we got Steven Naismith, Peter Haring, John Souttar and Uche Ikpeazu, these players back on the field, we would have had a good chance of catching the teams above us.

“I feel desperatel­y sorry for the Hearts supporters that we’re in the position we’re in but I know myself that I did everything I could to make the team as successful as possible.”

Asked if he thinks the team improved under Stendel, Levein, speaking to BBC Radio Scotland, added: “I don’t know, it’s a difficult question for me. I didn’t watch all the games.

“For me to analyse whether the team is better or worse wouldn’t be the right thing to do when I don’t have all the informatio­n.”

Levein also insists he did not agree with owner Ann Budge’s decision to sack him from his dugout role last October.

He added: “In most situations when managers lose their jobs, it’s about pressure on the board and it takes a lot for a director or a chairman to be able to go against the supporters if they’re unhappy.

“I’ve found over my time in football, not just myself but other managers, when the pressure turns on to the board or chairman then the easiest thing is to make a change.

“The results weren’t good enough, I don’t make any claims that they were, but I do believe the unpreceden­ted run of injury problems was the problem.

“And I do believe that if I had still been in charge and had some of these key players back on the field then things would have kicked on again. But I didn’t get that opportunit­y and I’m not blaming Ann or the board because it’s human nature.

“I wasn’t going to argue with her. I can understand her decision, I didn’t agree with it but I can understand it.”

Levein also said the loss of such important players amid a barren run of results was a significan­t factor when the supporters turned on him because many members of the squad were ‘sheep’.

He added: “There are people within teams who can carry a load, there are others who are good team-mates but they tend to be what I call the sheep, they follow.

“You need your key players to be playing and to be on form and then they make other players look very good.”

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 ??  ?? Former Hearts manager Craig Levein blames his injury list
Former Hearts manager Craig Levein blames his injury list

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