The Scotsman

Allan feared he’d never play again

- Moira Gordon Football writer

Hibernian midfielder Scott Allan feared he wouldn’t play football again after being diagnosed with a heart condition.

The 29-year-old missed a large chunk of this season with an unknown issue, which led to plenty of unhelpful speculatio­n regarding the player’s future. But yesterday, in an interview with Hibstv, Allan opened up on why he was sidelined.

The player was diagnosed with hypertroph­ic cardiomyop­athy. It is a condition which makes it difficult for blood to pump in and out of the heart, with the walls of the heart chamber becoming slightly thicker.

The condition causes fatigue and dizzy spells, with less oxygen throughout the body, and left Allan fearing for his future as a first-team Hibs player.

"I’m feeling well within myself to speak about what I went through," he said.

“I really feared I wouldn’t play again. The way I had been feeling up until I had that test in terms of

Hibernian manager Jack Ross says he sought very clear assurances before he let Scott Allan return to training or matchday action, insisting he did not want to do anything that would put the popular playmaker at risk.

The 29-year-old midfielder has missed a massive chunk of this season and, having chosen to deal with the matter away from the public eye, he spoke out yesterday to confirm he has been diagnosed with the heart condition hypertroph­ic cardiomyop­athy, which results in a thickening of the walls of the heart chamber and makes it difficult to pump blood in and out and provide the body with enough oxygen, especially during exercise.

Allan hopes that by raising awareness, more players can be screened for the potentiall­y life-threatenin­g condition which claimed the life of Phil O’donnell, pictured inset right, during a match in 2007, and led to the collapse of another footballer Fabrice Muamba, in 2012. The Bolton midfielder fortunatel­y survived but the incident brought his playing career to a premature end. And, Ross says he did not want to risk another casualty.

“My priority was always Scott’s wellbeing, physically and mentally,” he said. “Physically we had to make sure we were doing as much as we could to understand the issue and ascertain if he could return and mentally we did a lot with him at the beginning to keep him involved and keep him busy.

“Him and I spoke regularly at length about all the possibilit­ies and some of those conversati­ons were quite emotional as well. He’s a young man and he’s also a father and we had to speak about all the potential consequenc­es.

“From a management point of view it was another learning experience for me. But it was more about Scott’s wellbeing as a person and his return to health first and foremost.”

When Allan did make his competitiv­e return as a substitute in last month’s semi-final of the Betfred Cup, he had not featured in the first team since August and while he was delighted to see the influentia­l star pushing for a place, Ross said it was incumbent on him to seek as many guarantees as possible from the club medical staff before facilitati­ng his comeback. “I had to have regular dialogue with them to voice some of my concerns and check what we had to go through. They had to put together a robust plan for Scott, to get him to buy into that and then we all had to acknowledg­e we had to fulfil that criteria to be comfortabl­e with it.”

In consultati­on with specialist­s in London and New York, a programme was devised by club doctor Duncan Reid and Nathan Ring, Hibs’ head of football science and medicine, and their staff, and Ross says he ultimately had to trust their judgment.

“Scott, I’m sure, would speak of his appreciati­on for what they did in terms of putting the appropriat­e plan in place for him and then building him up, not getting impatient with it and making sure that he was ticking the boxes and genuinely making sure that we weren’t putting him at risk because it was something that I wanted to continuall­y know,” said Ross. “I didn’t want to be responsibl­e for putting him at risk and I think we had to make sure we were all comfortabl­e with that.

“We spoke to Duncan at length about it on a number of occasions and then spoke to Scott ourselves. I felt that if the informatio­n I was getting from the medical experts was satisfacto­ry and he believed he was in a good place then I had to trust that and we had to put that aside and continue as normal. But, if I had any concerns at that point, I couldn’t have let him in my group, I couldn’t have trained him, so I had to put my faith

in both him and the medical expertise we were given.”

Told that he wasn't at any more risk than any other player, “that was the last thing we needed to be comfortabl­e with it”, said Ross.

Thrilled to see him back in the fold and able to look ahead with positivity, Ross praised Allan’s character but warned fans that they will have

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to be patient as he does not expect to see the talismanic player back at his best before next season.

“Scott has already shown his resilience with having to deal with being a Type 1 diabetic,” said Ross.

“I probably, rather ignorantly, didn’t appreciate the challenge that can provide for people in general terms, not just profession­al athletes. But, my understand­ing of that has increased, and ironically enough that was through the initial period when Scott wasn’t feeling his best. “People thought it was connected to his diabetes so I tried to get more informatio­n on that and speak to people and Scott to get a better feel for the challenges he faced on a daily basis and this has been another challenge for a young man with all the worries that go with it.

“People will always focus on the football part of it, but I think for him the initial worry was about his general wellbeing and that he was ok.

“He’s a very young man so to have that type of worry over your health is not nice and he had to cope with that.

“I think what this does is put football in perspectiv­e, it’s such a big part of people’s lives in Scotland and it dominates a lot of discussion points but it is human beings that are involved so this gives perspectiv­e to everyone, to ensure that we don’t get too down in times with some of the challenges that it offers, and in that respect, it has been a good thing. As for the resilience aspect, I think Scott has shown that for a long time anyway in terms of the challenges he has faced in his career.”

“Scott and I spoke regularly at length about all the possibilit­ies and some of those conversati­ons were quite emotional as well. He’s a young man and he’s also a father, and we had to speak about all the potential consequenc­es”

“I think what this does is put football in perspectiv­e. It’s suchabigpa­rtof people’s lives in Scotland and it dominates a lot of discussion points. But it is human beings that are involved, so this gives perspectiv­e to everyone, to ensure that we don’t get too down in times with some of the challenges that it offers”

 ??  ?? Allan: Heart condition
Allan: Heart condition
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 ??  ?? Scott Allan trains under the watchful eye of Jack Ross yesterday. The Hibs midfielder has confirmed he has been diagnosed with the heart condition hypertroph­ic cardiomyop­athy
Scott Allan trains under the watchful eye of Jack Ross yesterday. The Hibs midfielder has confirmed he has been diagnosed with the heart condition hypertroph­ic cardiomyop­athy
 ??  ?? 0 Allan in action in the Betfred Cup semi-final against St Johnstone
0 Allan in action in the Betfred Cup semi-final against St Johnstone

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