The Scotsman

Levein provides a lift as Hearts

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A genuine sense of occasion was engendered by Hearts’ hosting of Aberdeen at Murrayfiel­d on Saturday. Craig Levein might have felt his team were overcome by it in his first game back in charge of the Gorgie club but, to most others, it felt more that his players actually rose to it.

The fact the 17,000 home supporters in a 24,248 crowd – who, with the help of 7,000 noisy Aberdeen fans, provided a good spectator spread in the cavernous surrounds of the 67,000-capacity rugby arena – were generous with their applause at full-time told its own story.

Hearts may now only have one win from five Premiershi­p games. Equally, two more lodgings at their makeshift home of Murrayfiel­d notwithsta­nding, they still have a full two months of league fixtures away from Tynecastle before going back to their own place and its swanky new main stand.

Yet, in outplaying an Aberdeen side that came to Edinburghw­itha100per­centrecord during a second half in which goalkeeper Joe Lewis’s brilliance was all that kept them at bay, there was a powerful sense that the Levein influence was already having a regenerati­ve effect. And that, if nothing else, from deposed predecesso­r Ian Cathro he has inherited a group of players that can make Hearts a team involved in the hunt for European places.

The switch to a three-man central defence was just one tweak that meant a smart use of the available resources. Aaron Hughes, Christophe Berra and John Souttar aren’t the quickest. A weakness that can be masked if you don’t play them in a flat back four.

Hughes, indeed, made his first league appearance since having a torrid time of it in the 4-1 opening day defeat by Celtic a month earlier. The Northern Irishman cut a far more assured figure at Murrayfiel­d, and afterwards spoke of the “subtle difference­s” that Levein had made, the “little things here and there” in the two days the whole squad had trained together following the internatio­nal break.

Indeed, the fact that the Hearts manager could cut such a downbeat figure after

AARON HUGHES being the first team to halt what had seemed an Aberdeen juggernaut was certainly a break with the Cathro way of often attempting to apply lipstick to a pig.

There were technical considerat­ions Hughes cited as having been given greater emphasis by Levein. “Getting that feeling of being hard to beat, making sure that at all times – from a defender’s point of view – when we’re attacking we need to be on the front foot and make that first contact so it keeps us on the front foot and stops them from counter-attacking,” was how he explained the change.

More than that, Hughes acknowledg­ed a psychologi­cal shift within the Hearts dressing room through being led by a man who is a successful, battlehard­ened manager with a temper that smoulders and sometimes blazes.

“Just his presence around the place [has been obvious],” said the defender. “He hasn’t come in and screamed and shouted and pulled the roof down. He has just come in and been very clear and concise and to the point. It’s only been a couple of days but that’s how it has been so far.

“He definitely has a presence with his experience and what he has done. But I think with him being around the club anyway and seeing him day to day, it’s just he is more hands on now than he was before. So far so good.” It is only one game, Hughes stressed. A decent start for Levein, neverthele­ss, though the 37-year-old centreback didn’t much care for the suggestion a third clean sheet in five games belied the struggles of his club this season.

“There has never been a sense of us struggling, certainly not within the group, added Hughes. “We have set a standard now we have to hit every week.

“He [Craig Levein] definitely has a presence. He hasn’t come in and screamed and shouted and pulled the place down. He has just come in and been very clear and conscise and to the point”

3 Dons captain Graeme Shinnie greets keeper Joe Lewis at full-time

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