The Scotsman

Mcmanus late header rescues Ra Skacel sends a dagger through H

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A Hearts side supplement­ed by four new signings suffered a pratfall on Pratt Street, spearedatt­hedeathfol­lowingacon­tribution from one their most revered former sons.

In a deeply unsatisfac­tory end to the fourth-round tie from Hearts’ point of view, what many suspected might happen came to pass.

The tickets are already all sold out for the Hearts fans’ tribute dinner to former player Rudi Skacel in March, which is just as well. Because their hero’s searing shot from the edge of the box was flicked past Jack Hamilton by fellow substitute Declan Mcmanus in a dismaying end to the match for the visitors. Hearts, who had taken a first-half lead through Jamie Walker, had simply not done enough to merit the win.

They do at least have a second bite at the cherry on Burns night on Wednesday. But this result means it is now just one win from six since Ian Cathro took charge in December, with a hazardous-looking tie against local rivals Hibernian waiting in the fifth round should they prevail in the replay.

The ingredient­s were all there for a shock yesterday so perhaps there’s a positive to be taken from Hearts featuring in the fifth round draw at all.

An opposition manager reportedly nursing a grievance, a poor run of results heading into the clash and the aforementi­oned changes on the back of three weeks of inaction due to the Premiershi­p’s winter break. It all made for a potentiall­y fraught afternoon for the Tynecastle side. And so it proved.

Gary Locke was clearly delighted to put one over a club, or more specifical­ly a regime, that considered him dispensabl­e three summers ago. Skacel, meanwhile, signalled to the Hearts fans after the late equaliser, as if seeking forgivenes­s. But he made a point of acknowledg­ing the home fans at the end rather than the away supporters, who had greeted his 80th-minute appearance with such loud acclaim.

Locke’s motivation for turning, eventually, to Skacel was self-evident. In the absence of much in the way of inspiratio­n from his hard-working side, there was little to lose by letting loose the 37 year-old, whose preoccupat­ion with matters Hearts had begun to grate with the Raith fans. On too came Declan Mcmanus, another player with something to prove to the Kirkcaldy denizens after a run of ten games without a goal.

Both combined in the 89th minute to provide a slow-burning tie with a dramatic finale. Skacel had been a rather less pivotal figure for the majority of the match, clad in a large tracksuit on a bitterly cold day in Kirkcaldy. Ryan Hardie was preferred in favour of him when Locke made a first change after 68 minutes, with Chris Johnston withdrawn.

Even when Skacel came on, after a double substituti­on that saw Mark Stewart and Jordan Thompson depart, he struggled to make an impact. He’d barely touched the ball before swinging a right foot at a corner. The ball might well have beaten Hamilton in any case but Mcmanus provided a touch to divert it past the ‘keeper. Hearts players’ complained long and hard, sensing Mcmanus had been offside. But after consultati­on with his farside assistant, referee John Beaton rightly signalled a goal.

It could have got worse for the visitors in time added on, with Hamilton forced into a parry from towering Raith defender Jeanyves M’voto’s header, with the loose ball eventually scrambled clear.

Morrissey’s Everyday is Like Sunday ,one of the songs chosen by the Stark’s Park DJ, had previously set the tone for an afternoon of surprising­ly low-level entertainm­ent prior to this late drama. Raith were committed and industriou­s but hitherto lacked the touch of class to hurt Hearts, understand­ably given the Kirkcaldy club’s current form. Their recent results had not inspired much confidence. Without a win since October, they’ve gone nine Championsh­ip matches without a win, scoring just three times.

It started off as a fairly comfortabl­e afternoon for Hearts – and their phalanx of new arrivals. Of the four, Aaron Hughes seemed to settle quickest, drawing on all his years of experience to cope with a potentiall­y tricky debut. He teamed up well at centre-half with John Souttar, who, at 20, is 17 years younger.

This mix of youth and experience seemed set to serve Hearts well. But there were some nervous moments, particular­ly in the second-half, with Raith shooting towards their own fans. An unmarked Mark Stewart hit the bar from the edge of the six-yard box after Kevin Mchattie’s cut-back. It was a poor miss but the striker performed well otherwise, holding the ball up and proving a nuisance for the Hearts’ backline, three of whom were making their debuts.

Slovenian right-back Andraz Struna and former Hamilton Accies left-back Lennard Sowah joined fellow newcomer Hughes in defence. Malaury Martin, meanwhile, started for the first time in midfield but struggled to make an impact.

But Hearts seemed set fair to progress after Walker’s 37th-minute goal, neatly struck past Kevin Cuthbert after Don Cowie had intercepte­d Thompson’s loose pass. However, a perplexing lack of urgency in the second half means the prospect of a second successive fifth-round Edinburgh derby remains on hold.

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