The Scotsman

Hearts want £1m for Walker

● Rangers’ initial offer of £500,000 for 15-goal winger is rejected as Tynecastle club demand double

- By BARRY ANDERSON

Rangers have approached Hearts about a deal for Jamie Walker but Tynecastle officials have rejected their initial advances and told the Ibrox club they want more than £1 million for the winger.

Talks between the clubs have taken place after Rangers made a move to sign the 23-year-old. A £500,000 transfer fee was verbally put forward by the Ibrox club but it was instantly dismissed by Hearts, who want a sevenfigur­e sum.

Walker has told the Edinburgh club he won’t sign a new deal when his current one expires in summer 2018. As a result, Hearts will reluctantl­y listen to offers for the player.

Rangers’ interest is not unexpected but they were told during conversati­ons that their valuation of Walker is significan­tly lower than Hearts’. They are expected to try to negotiate further over the coming weeks.

Hearts are determined to secure upwards of £1m for a player they developed in their youth academy, and who has been a first-team regular for several seasons.

Walker was named Player of the Year and Fans’ Player of the Year at the club’s endof-season awards night in April. He finished the campaign with 15 goals from 43 competitiv­e appearance­s in all competitio­ns.

Walker was outstandin­g in Hearts’ 4-1 win over Rangers at Tynecastle in February, scoring twice as the home team dismantled Mark Warburton’s side.

Head coach Ian Cathro is braced for Walker’s departure at some point and is also resigned to losing fellow wide man Sam Nicholson, who is out of contract and wanted by MLS club Minnesota United.

Rangers are in the midst of a major rebuilding programme ahead of next season and have already signed Aberdeen skipper Ryan Jack, Bruno Alves, Daniel Candeias, Fabio Cardoso and Dalcio.

The Ibrox club have secured work permits for Mexican pair Carlos Pena and Eduardo Herrera ahead of their expected moves, Colombian striker Alfredo Morelos is waiting on a work permit, while Norwich City midfielder Graham Dorrans is also on their radar.

One player who looks to be on the way out of Ibrox is the striker Joe Garner, who is close to agreeing a transfer to the English Championsh­ip side Ipswich Town.

The bustling centre forward became something of cult hero with the Rangers support following his move from Preston North End last summer for an estimated £1.8 million.

Garner, who signed a threeyear contract, scored ten goals in 34 games in what looks like being his only season at Ibrox.

Rangers are expected to take a financial hit on Garner, with the striker likely to move to East Anglia for a fee slightly below £1m.

John Robertson yesterday returned to Inverness Caley Thistle and declared himself a better manager than the championsh­ip-winner who was lost to Hearts almost 13 years ago.

The boot was on the other foot as the Tynecastle goalscorin­g legend was head-hunted from his beloved boyhood club to spearhead the relegated Ladbrokes Premiershi­p side’s Championsh­ip push.

The 52-year-old, who has signed a two-year deal, revealed he hadn’t applied for, or even considered applying for, the post made vacant by Richie Foran’s sacking. He had been happy working as Hearts’ under 17s coach while fulfilling an ambassador­ial role within the Gorgie club. But describing himself as “Edinburgh by birth, Invernesia­n by choice” the long-time Highland capital resident found the lure of returning to the club and city overwhelmi­ng.

It is five years since “Robbo” last held a managerial role, at East Fife, in a line of work where a couple of years’ frontline absence can have individual­s branded “yesterday’s man”. Far from being a football dinosaur, though – as some Caley Thistle supporters fear – Robertson delivered a persuasive list of credential­s detailing where he has learned and progressed.

He insists he is a far more mature, calmer individual than the firebrand who made history by guiding the Highlander­s into the top flight for the first time in 2004.

He said: “Every job is a challenge [and] comes with its own little intricacie­s and frustratio­ns. It’s a huge challenge.

“It’s going to be formidable and interestin­g, but I’m ready for it. I’m passionate about it.

“This time last week it wasn’t even on the radar, but suddenly things changed very quickly.

“Once I got deeper into the negotiatio­ns, the old managerial juices came flowing back, along with the determinat­ion and resolve in myself to say ‘I can do this’.

“There will be people saying he’s not managed for a few years, but I’ve had several opportunit­ies to manage that I’ve turned down.

“After East Fife I took a wee break from the game, which suited me, and got the wonderful opportunit­y to go back to Hearts, post-administra­tion.

“The projects they wanted me to do were huge, both on and off the pitch. There were lots of things I learned off the pitch about the social media, and commercial aspects of it.

“I think that makes you a more rounded manager because you realise what happens in a football club.

“As a coach and a player you just turn up, train and go to games. You don’t understand the complexiti­es and just how hard people work off the pitch running a club. There was always something, deep in the back of my mind, that there might be another opportunit­y to manage, but it had to be something that excited me.

“It had to be something special to drag me away from Hearts. This club is something special and this challenge is something special, and I’m really looking forward to it.”

JOHN ROBERTSON

Asked if he was now a better manager than 13 years ago, Robertson replied: “I think so, but, like anything else, that will come down to results.

“But, in terms of experience, since I’ve left Inverness, I’ve been to cup semi-finals with Hearts, coached in the Europa League group stages against Basel, Ferencvaro­s and Schalke. I’ve managed in the Champions League qualifying rounds and won a cup with Derry. I took East Fife to the quarter-finals of the League Cup for the first time in 75 years.

“These are all great football experience­s, but I’ve also experience­d life outwith football. I was business developmen­t manager with Orion Group for seven years in the oil and gas industry. Working at Hearts was really eye-opening, too, on the commercial side and on special projects. And I’ve kept in touch with cutting-edge coaching techniques within the SFA, continuing to work hard to improve.

“I have kept my Uefa Pro Licence up-to-date and I’ve been seen as a good enough coach to mentor C and B licences for the last eight to ten years, as well as being head of coach education at Hearts. All of this has been massive for my experience and my learning.

“What you see in front of you, from the manager that left here all these years ago, is a more experience­d and rounded individual, and a more mature manager as well. I was a bit of a wild card in my earlier days. I’m certainly calmer now, but don’t perceive that calmness for a lack of passion. That’s still there, burning.”

Robertson has a big recruitmen­t job to fulfil with barely half a squad of recognised first-team players left in situ at the Caledonian Stadium. But he was already hard at work, even before being granted permission to speak to Inverness.

Robertson said: “It’s been such a strange 72 hours because I started to think ‘if I’m honoured enough to get the job, what am I going to do?’

“You subtly start contacting agents, friends and contacts saying ‘there’s a few clubs in the Championsh­ip looking for players, who is available?’ and disguising everything.

“It’s not as if I’ve lost touch or been on a different planet. I’ve still been on the football planet and still wholly connected with football. Now I want to bring all that knowledge, expertise and connection­s to work here.”

Robertson will, initially at least, retain assistant manager Brian Rice and firstteam coach Scott Kellacher, both of whom worked under John Hughes and then Richie Foran.

“I’m certainly calmer now, but don’t perceive that calmness for a lack of passion. That’s still there, burning”

 ??  ?? 0 Jamie Walker scored twice in Hearts’ 4-1 win over Rangers in February and is now wanted by the Ibrox club but they must up their offer.
0 Jamie Walker scored twice in Hearts’ 4-1 win over Rangers in February and is now wanted by the Ibrox club but they must up their offer.
 ??  ?? IAN CATHRO The Hearts head coach is braced for the departure of Walker and fellow wideman Sam Nicholson
IAN CATHRO The Hearts head coach is braced for the departure of Walker and fellow wideman Sam Nicholson
 ??  ?? 2 John Robertson is unveiled as the new Inverness manager at the Caledonian Stadium yesterday after being headhunted by the relegated club to spearhead their bid to make an instant return to the Premiershi­p.
2 John Robertson is unveiled as the new Inverness manager at the Caledonian Stadium yesterday after being headhunted by the relegated club to spearhead their bid to make an instant return to the Premiershi­p.

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