The Scotsman

NEW-LOOK STADIUM

- By DARREN JOHNSTONE

Hearts captain Christophe Berra insists the difference between the club he left and the one he rejoined could not be greater.

The Gorgie side were beset by off-field problems under then owner Vladimir Romanov’s ruinous reign when the defender left Tynecastle for Wolves in a £2.5 million switch in January 2009.

Berra was also the skipper in his final campaign before embarking on a fresh challenge south of the border and on one occasion he had the unenviable task of telling his team-mates they would not receive their wages on time.

The Scotland internatio­nalist also witnessed other bizarre situations, such as Romanov and striker Roman Bednar trading punches in an impromptu boxing match.

However, current owner Ann Budge has the club back on track with the help of supporters group the Foundation of Hearts, and Berra, who returned to Hearts from Ipswich in May, insists the stability on and off the pitch is a far cry from what he left behind.

He said: “There were a lot of good times under Romanov, but also a lot of bad times.

“When I was captain and we weren’t getting paid on time, I had to tell the players, although we always did get paid.

“At the time I was quite young so I didn’t maybe grasp how crucial it was for certain players. Lucky enough, in the back of my head I knew I would be moving at one point.

“When I look back now it’s probably made me a stronger character as well. It’s not nice at the time, I left when the s*** really did hit the fan.

“I remember that (the boxing match). I met Romanov a few times and he was fine with me. He didn’t punch me.

“But Ann is really straight down the middle, she is honest with you and that’s all you can ask. She won’t punch you.

“Everyone respects her and she’s done a great job and hopefully can take this club on to bigger and better things.

“It’s different now. Ann is first class in how she represents the club, what she’s done for the club and how she is around the players as well.

“The club has come back bigger and stronger now, the new stand is getting built and we’re signing some quality players and hopefully we can have a good season.”

Lithuanian businessma­n Romanov was rarely seen at Tynecastle and Berra says he has a much closer working relationsh­ip with Budge, so much so that he dealt directly with the successful businesswo­man during his contract negotiatio­ns.

He added: “I was basically e-mailing back and forth to her. I think she would admit that I was a dream in contract negotiatio­ns. I wasn’t needy or high maintenanc­e.

“I wanted to come back and I was happy with what I got. I think both parties were happy that I signed. I’ve got a good relationsh­ip with her and long may that continue.”

A symbol of the club’s progress under Budge is the ongoing constructi­on of the new £12 m main stand at Tynecastle.

The players will get a closeup view on the redevelopm­ent when Ian Cathro’s side host English Premier League side

“Opposition players will look forward to playing at Tynecastle, but we have to make sure that they don’t enjoy it on the pitc h”

CHRISTOPHE BERRA

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom