The Scotsman

Sacked Levein won’t want any sympathy from me, says Hibs manager

● Heckingbot­tom opens up on how it feels when angry fans call for dismissal

- By ALAN TEMPLE

Paulheckin­gbottomhas­more reason than most to feel sorry for Craig Levein.

The Hibernian head coach has found himself under comparable pressure for several weeks amid a creeping malaise at Easter Road. Ninth in the Premiershi­p and without a league win since the opening day of the season, the point of no return has come for some supporters.

Indeed, for much of this campaign the question ‘which Edinburgh club would blinkfirst?’hasprovide­dacaptivat­ing, if rather distastefu­l, sub-plot.

On Thursday evening, Hearts owner Ann Budge provided the answer. A 1-0 defeat at St Johnstone the previous night and slipping to joint-bottom of the table was the final straw for the Gorgie club.

Neverthele­ss, Heckingbot­tom is reluctant to offer Levein his pity, insisting that is the last thing his old rival would want. This, he explains, is the life they signed up for.

“Thereisamu­tualrespec­tfor the job we’re doing, because we know how difficult it can be,” said the former Barnsely and Leeds boss. “We’ve come across each other a few times, doing some charity work and playing against each other, and we get on great.

“But I wouldn’t imagine he would want my sympathy. We got into this job knowing what it is and nobody would be sitting here if they didn’t enjoy it.

“Not every bit of it is enjoyable but there is satisfacti­on to be had from the challenge, from knowing that you’ve given everything in a tough job.

“Craig has been through this before, he’s had big success before and this bit is just part and parcel of the game.”

There came a point on Wednesday night when Heckinbott­om looked unlikely to outlast his counterpar­t across the city. Trailing 2-1 against Livingston deep into the second half and, with results elsewhere going against them, Hibs were bottom of the Premiershi­p. A portion of the support chanted ‘we want Hecky out’ as owner Ron Gordon watched on from the director’s box. It felt like the end for the Englishman. And then Martin Boyle notched a 95th-minute equaliser.

“Personally, it’s difficult,” added Heckingbot­tom. “You don’t want to be in that position where people are talking about you losing your job. It certainly drives you and narrows your focus. Ultimately, you need to be happy going to bed at night, thinking ‘have I done everything I can?’

“A lot of things are out of my control but I’m in control of how hard I work, how I behave, how honest I am with people.

“The one thing you can make sure you do is fight and fight and be the role model for others to follow.”

It is a placid, philosophi­cal view from a man who was dismissed by Leeds United after just 16 games in charge and he posits that thick skin is not only a prerequisi­te to being a manager, but an inevitable result of a career spent in this cut-throat sport.

“From when you are seven years old, everyone has an opinion on you,” he continues. “Then you get older and people judge you against the other good players, then it’s whether to sign you as a schoolboy and whether to keep you.

“Then it’s whether to give you a YTS, then are you good enough for pro? Good enough to be in the 11? Then you have 30,000 people shouting at you, saying you’re no good. That’s increased tenfold when you are a manager.”

Gordon will be enjoying Hampden’s hospitalit­y today and will expect to see some bang for his buck against Celtic. Otherwise, he may leave the national stadium with a major call to make. “We’ve got no-one to be scared of,” said Heckingbot­tom. “In my three games against Celtic, we’ve drawn two and lost one – and in the one that we lost, a couple of moments of magic from their good players took the game away from us. We have to be at our best to try to limit their opportunit­ies, and capitalise on the ones that we create.”

From a personal perspectiv­e, Heckingbot­tom says the prospect of reaching a major domestic cup final is not one to be understate­d. “This was part of the decision for me [to join Hibs],” he added. “I saw this as a big opportunit­y. If you do well there’s a chance to get to a domestic cup final, a chance to get into Europe.”

 ??  ?? 0 Paul Heckingbot­tom says Hibs have ‘no-one to be scared of’ when they face Celtic this evening.
0 Paul Heckingbot­tom says Hibs have ‘no-one to be scared of’ when they face Celtic this evening.
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