The Scotsman

Hibs wary of Hearts legal costs but insist they will survive

● Dempster has no regrets over way club voted on SPFL

- By MOIRA GORDON

Hibernian’s Leeann Dempster has moved to quash online rumours that the club could be about to go bust but admitted that it “would cause some concern” if the outcome of the ongoing legal dispute between Hearts, Partick Thistle and the SPFL resulted in the relegated clubs being awarded £10 million in compensati­on.

But, refusing to add to the acrimony that has engulfed the game, the Easter Road chief executive distanced Hibs from alleged calls for the two rebel clubs to be expelled from the senior game over their court action.

“Those words have never even been uttered [by Hibs’ hierarchy] and that outcome wouldn’t even be a discussion at this club. That is so far removed from any reality I would recognise,” Dempster stated.

“Without labouring it, there is currently no mandate from any league in Scotland wanting league reconstruc­tion at this time, particular­ly at this time, and the outcome of that is we now have the legal challenge from Hearts and Partick Thistle.

“We have to respect that position and deal with it as best we all can. It is not 40 clubs against two – all clubs need to deal with this as best they can until that comes to a resolution.”

Dempster, who also rubi bished a story linking her with a switch to the Tynecastle club, said she was comfortabl­e with how Hibs had voted on recent SPFL resolution­s.

“I don’t have regrets because try not to live my life with 20-20 hindsight,” she said. “You have to deal with things and make the best judgments and deal with things at the time.

“But, what we have just now is clubs in dispute with the league and other clubs and that is damaging, never mind the cash. If there was a large award made, it can only come from one place and that would be the central distributi­on pot and that is already tight so that would cause some concern.”

The Leith club also took a financial hit when the league was called and the points-per-game method of deciding standings saw them drop a place to seventh.

Last week they conceded that it is now necessary, despite agreeing salary deferrals in April, to impose wage cuts and redundanci­es as they strive to pull themselves through the ongoing Covid-19 crisis.

However, that does not mean the club is teetering on the brink, she insisted.

“Clubs, and not just us, have an uncanny ability to survive, let’s be honest,” said Dempster. “We have been around for 145 years and we will still be around after this. I know there is a rumour, about us going bust, but not at all.

“These are difficult times and we have had to take difficult steps, difficult decisions but that is the same for everybody.

“But football clubs are part of the community. What else

“Wehavebeen­around for 145 years and we will still be around after this. I know there is a rum our, about us going bust, but not at all”

evokes the same passion in Scotland? Very few things matter that way, other than family, and this is why clubs need to get back out there playing again.”

As things stand, the league fixture list will not include any Edinburgh derbies.

While those games are money generators for both clubs and could have helped minimise hibs’ losses, demp st er revealed those calculatio­ns were never part of the equation when casting votes on ending the league campaign or blocking reconstruc­tion.

“That was not a considerat­ion for us. Honestly, it wasn’t,” she said. “This isn’t about who else is in the league. It is to do with the fact that football has been materially affected, as every business has, by Covid.

“Those [financial] issues are not linked specifical­ly to who is in the league. Those issues are related to the fact that the game worldwide has changed immeasurab­ly and we are not able to generate income the way we used to. That is irrespecti­ve of who is in the league with us.

“We are notable to sweat the assets the way we did before and unfortunat­ely the costs are still running at the level they were before Covid hit. So, any fair-minded person understand­s that you have to make adjustment­s and you need to correct that in a way that protects the club.”

The club have already identified areas of their operation where savings can be made, but they will not make decisions on jobs or the required cuts in areas such as coaching and staffing at academy level until the end of the 30-day consultati­on period.

Regarding a report that she was a candidate for the sporting director’s role at Hearts, Dempster added: “I am sure they [Hearts] are as bemused asia ma bout where that came from. The internet can often run away with itself and there is nothing in that from them, I’m sure, or from me. It was just one of those daft stories.”

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 ??  ?? 0 Hibs chief executive Leeann Dempster: ‘Without labouring it, there is currently no mandate from any league in Scotland wanting league reconstruc­tion at this time.’
0 Hibs chief executive Leeann Dempster: ‘Without labouring it, there is currently no mandate from any league in Scotland wanting league reconstruc­tion at this time.’

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