The Scotsman

Levein: Two teams trying to make best of bad situation

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Rangers may not have their troubles to seek at the moment, but the same could be said of Hearts, according to manager Craig Levein.

Tomorrow, the teams will face up at Murrayfiel­d, Hearts’ temporary home, looking for a result to soothe their respective woes. The fact that the capital side have had such a nomadic start to the Premiershi­p campaign and endured their own managerial tumult at the beginning of the season means they have had to overcome obstacles already. But now they have to bounce back from a derby defeat and do it while struggling with injuries to key players.

Left with a selection conundrum that seems to have no obvious answer, not when players such as Don Cowie and Arnaud Djoum remain on the sidelines, Levein, who says he may have the experience­d midfield duo back for the upcoming Kilmarnock match, believes that whoever he does choose to start in tomorrow’s lunchtime kickoff will put up a fight. He says only time will tell if that will be enough against a managerles­s Rangers, though.

“We’ve got our own problems, which is the first thing to say. We’ve got midfield dilemmas. So we won’t be at our best,” he said. “I would say the same about Rangers. They can’t be at their best because they’ve got injuries, they have Bruno Alves’ suspension, Ryan Jack will be out because he received a red card, Graham Dorrans went off with an ankle knock…”

Hearts had managed to overcome

0 Connor Randall, Cole Stockton and Christophe Berra trudge off the pitch at Easter Road after the midweek derby defeat by Hibs. their issues, with only one defeat in six prior to the midweek derby loss, and closing the gap on teams above them and a victory over Rangers would take them level on points with the Ibrox club, offering extra incentive.

“It’s always difficult but it’s a situation you face very often as a coach. We want to win. And it’s a ruthless business. It’s dog eat dog,” added Levein.

“That doesn’t stop me having a degree of empathy but we’re coming head to head on Saturday. We all know how tough it is. And there’s no point in complainin­g about it – it doesn’t make any difference. So it’s just about controllin­g the things you can control.”

The midfield conundrum is one the Hearts manager has tried to address in different ways, with teenagers and defenders thrown into the mix. He opted for more of the latter than the former for the midweek trip to Leith, fearing that the derby would be too big an occasion for 16-yearold Harry Cochrane but, with the alternativ­es making little impact on the opposition despite the fact the game was still there to be fought for, he

CRAIG LEVEIN sent the young midfielder on at the start of the second half. He made a difference, albeit not enough for Hearts to take anything from match. But his manager is considerin­g giving him the opportunit­y from the start against Rangers.

“The only thing I can do is play Harry Cochrane,” said Levein. “He has come on in the last two matches and changed the game for us in a positive sense. That would be my big thing, whether he starts on Saturday.

“I wish I had started him on Tuesday. Harry did make a difference, but it’s bad when we are relying on a 16-year-old to change things and come on to make a contributi­on. But sometimes the younger you are, the less fear you have. He’s handled any situation I have put him in so far. He can’t physically handle it, but he tries.

“To be fair, the kid’s in because we have got injuries and we’ve got problems, but he has done well.”

Up against his former employers, Kyle Lafferty is a player Levein expects will rise to the occasion, but he acknowledg­es that the difficulty lies in getting him the supply he needs.

“I hope this is the sort of game Kyle will relish,” he said. “He’s done well for us, scored goals but the problem isn’t that strikers are missing chances, it’s that our midfield players have disappeare­d so we’re not creating too many chances.

“We are not set up to go from back to front, that’s not Kyle’s strong suit. Isma [Goncalves] and Jamie Walker are not those sort of players either. We need to play football, but we need players who can play football before we can do that.” Dundee United are set to start interviewi­ng for the vacant manager’s position after receiving more than 50 applicatio­ns. Ray Mckinnon was sacked on Tuesday after a slow start to the season which has left them five points adrift of St Mirren in the Championsh­ip, with a 2-0 loss to Inverness on Saturday confirming his fate.

The club have announced assistant boss Laurie Ellis will take charge of the team against Dumbarton this weekend, but interviews are due to start shortly with a view to hiring a permanent replacemen­t.

A statement on the club’s official website said: “Dundee United has received more than 50 applicatio­ns for the vacant manager’s position. The process of selection began on Wednesday morning with a short list currently being prepared for first stage interviews expected to start in the next 24 hours.”

John Hughes and Jim Mcintyre are two of the favourites for the job and former boss Mixu Paatelaine­n’s No 2 Gordon Young has emerged as a contender, but Alan Stubbs has ruled himself out.

“We’ve got midfield dilemmas so we won’t be at our best. I would say the same about Rangers. They can’t be at their best”

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