The Scotsman

Jim Mclean’s unlikely role in saving Hibs

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● Thirty years ago today, Hearts chief Wallace Mercer announced his plan to take over Hibs. In the second part of his interview, ex-easter Road chairman David Duff salutes the people who helped the club survive, including Hearts striker John Robertson, the Dundee United boss Jim Mclean and Sheila Rowland who defied her own husband to side with the campaign to rebuff Mercer’s plan

● Interview by

Alan Pattullo

Astatue of Jim Mclean is set to be erected outside Tannadice Park, the ground where he created so many miracles in his time as Dundee United manager.

It has now emerged there is perhaps sufficient reason for a tribute to Mclean to be installed at Easter Road as well. His part in Hibs’ efforts to thwart a takeover attempt by Hearts – announced 30 years agotoday–hasbeenrev­ealed by the club’s then chairman.

David Duff has saluted an unlikely string of heroes – and heroines – who helped Hibs ward off the threat of extinction following Wallace Mercer’s hostile bid. Among them are John Robertson, the Hearts striker who was so often the hammer of Hibs during his two spells at Tynecastle.

Robertson defied Mercer by attending a rally at the Usher Hall organised by Hands off Hibs, the hastily formed supporters’ pressure group. Another significan­t figure is Sheila Rowland, who defied her own husband, Hibs’ largest shareholde­r David Rowland. They were already separated by the time she became Scottish football’s first female director after being placed on the Easter Road board. Sheila subsequent­ly sided with the efforts to rebuff Mercer.

“She was part of the Rowland dynasty,” recalls Duff. “But she caught the Hibs bug. She loved it. She travelled in the bus, came to the boardrooms – those she was allowed into.” As for Robertson, he is anoth- er unlikely star. “His family are all Hibees, as everyone knows,” says Duff. “But you particular­ly respected that he went against his boss [Mercer]. He broke ranks and came out and said: ‘This is all wrong’. He is certainly a hero.”

Duff also recalled Mclean’s willingnes­s to become involved as Hibs sought someone to make an independen­t valuation of the entire Easter Road squad in a ploy designed to increase the club’s value and create another stumbling block for Mercer.

The Hearts owner originally bid just over £6 million for Hibs’ shares. Despite major shareholde­r David Rowland’s keenness to complete the deal, Duff quickly resolved to do his best to scupper it. One ploy was to prove this offer represente­d poor value for the club’s shareholde­rs, thereby frustratin­g Mercer’s plans. The Hibs board could recommend rejecting the offer to shareholde­rs.

In order to be able to do this, and in what he describes as an act of “creative accountanc­y,” Duff was advised to bring the players’ contracts onto the balance sheet alongside Hibs’ other assets. But they needed an independen­t verifier to provide a valuation of each player’s worth on the transfer market – step forward Mclean. Dundee United were once called Dundee Hibs, after all. His willingnes­s to help thwart Mercer was also perhaps rooted in his distaste for those he perceived as opportunis­tic plunderers – Mclean’s cornershop club were trained to take

the fight to their supermarke­t-sized rivals. The flash Mercer, who Mclean later revealed had offered him the Hearts job on two occasions during the 1980s, was never likely to be the Dundee United manager’s cup of tea.

“It was really that straightfo­rward,” recounts Duff now, having broken his long silence since his departure from the Hibs board in 1991.

“We sat down and thought we have to value these players. It was a bit of creative accountanc­y. Players’ contracts didn’t go on to the balance sheet. But when Tottenham were listed on the Stock Market, Irving Scholar, their owner, was the first to do that.

“He did it to bolster the company’s value before floating. We did it to survive.”

“There is a process called verificati­on and what it means is everything you claim has to be verified independen­tly,” explains Duff. “I could have said that if I were to sell all Hibs’ players tomorrow, I would make £6m. But that’s not verified. I needed someone else, someone who was independen­t, to come in and verify it.”

Duff and the Hibs directors considered the then Celtic manager Billy Mcneill, but it was tricky with the Parkhead club already in negotiatio­ns to sign John Collins from Hibs. Hearts manager Alex Macdonald was a non-starter for obvious reasons while Rangers manager Graeme Souness was not likely to be an ally since his chairman, David Murray, was negotiatin­g with Mercer over land he owned in Hermiston, where Hearts were considerin­g building a new stadium. The respected Mclean was the ideal candidate. He had no links with Hibs, and none with Hearts. Although he didn’t know it then, he would later understand how it felt to be on the wrong end of an attempted mugging when Dundee owner Angus Cook made a bid to takeover Dundee United 12 months later.

“What we said was: ‘As a senior, experience­d manager will you go through all our players and give us a value of what you think they are worth on the transfer market’,” recalls Duff. “And he did that. And he did that in 24 hours. He was another one who was like: ‘What does Mercer think he is doing?’”

“He was more than happy to help,” he adds. “We sent him up a list of players, including youth players, and he came back and said what he felt their value was. We still had John Collins at that time – just – and Andy Goram, Keith Houchen, and he simply went down the list, one by one.

“It came to around £6m in total,” adds Duff. “Because I did that it meant I could say: ‘Look, this 40p a share offer undervalue­s our company’. I was then perfectly within my rights to tell shareholde­rs that this was an unwelcome bid, please don’t sell your shares.”

Mclean took the responsibi­lity seriously. “He did his job with integrity,” says Duff. “He was not influenced in any way. When the sums came back, we were taken aback on occasion: ‘Is that all?! Paul Kane, worth only £200 grand!! He’s having a laugh!’ But it was entirely his opinion and it was conservati­ve. He did not exaggerate in any way whatsoever. I mean, look what he was paying his own players!”

Mclean might have been happy to help but he got one over the £6m squad when Dundee United and Hibs next met each other in October at Tannadice. This was a season Hibs feared they might never see. And yet they were hardly making the most of what should have felt like a reprieve, winning only two of their opening seven league games.

Hibs had already suffered a 3-0 home loss to Hearts on an emotional afternoon when Mclean’s side, league leaders at the time, administer­ed another defeat to Alex Miller’s men. A last-minute own goal by Willie Miller gave United all three points to ruin Murdo Macleod’s Hibs debut and leave the visitors near the foot of the table.

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 ??  ?? 1 Hibs’ fans make their feelings known at a protest meeting at Easter Road.
2 Dundee United boss Jim Mclean valued Hibs’ squad at £6m following a request to do so from the Easter Road board.
3 Hibs parade the Tennents Sixes trophy after winning it in January, 1990. Back, from left, Billy Findlay, Pat Mcginlay, Alan Sneddon, Caroline Cryans (Tennent’s), Angus Meldrum (marketing director of Tennent’s), Karen-jane Syme (Tennent’s), Paul Kane and Neil Cooper. Front, from left, John Collins, Brian Hamilton, Andy Goram, Graham Mitchell and Mickeyweir.
4 Hibs chairman at the time of the takeover bid, David Duff.
5 Hearts striker John Robertson, who defied Mercer to support Hibs’ cause.
6 Celtic boss Billy Mcneill was also considered for the squad valuation eventually undertaken by Mclean.
1 Hibs’ fans make their feelings known at a protest meeting at Easter Road. 2 Dundee United boss Jim Mclean valued Hibs’ squad at £6m following a request to do so from the Easter Road board. 3 Hibs parade the Tennents Sixes trophy after winning it in January, 1990. Back, from left, Billy Findlay, Pat Mcginlay, Alan Sneddon, Caroline Cryans (Tennent’s), Angus Meldrum (marketing director of Tennent’s), Karen-jane Syme (Tennent’s), Paul Kane and Neil Cooper. Front, from left, John Collins, Brian Hamilton, Andy Goram, Graham Mitchell and Mickeyweir. 4 Hibs chairman at the time of the takeover bid, David Duff. 5 Hearts striker John Robertson, who defied Mercer to support Hibs’ cause. 6 Celtic boss Billy Mcneill was also considered for the squad valuation eventually undertaken by Mclean.
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