The Scotsman

Boyce wants celebratio­n time, not empty gesture

- By Moira Gordon Football writer

In one of the biggest derbies, on the nation’s biggest stage, Liam Boyce hit the decisive penalty past Ofir Marciano and darted off in celebratio­n.

With just 10 minutes of extra time remaining, in the delayed 2020 Scottish Cup semi-final, the Hearts striker had helped his Championsh­ip team defy their underdog status and maintain the Gorgie side’s 100 per cent record against the Leith rivals at Hampden.

But, thanks to covid restrictio­ns, there was something lacking – the sight of thousands of fans going nuts in the stands.

“It was weird at the time. We had got a bit used to it in league games but Hampden is massive and then there’s the running track – I know there’s going to be a lot of fans this weekend – but when I scored that penalty I ran to the stands and did a knee slide then remembered there was nobody there!

“You are celebratin­g in front of nobody. But hopefully I get one on Saturday and I can celebrate with everybody," added the 31-year-old.

“When I was younger I used to practice celebratio­ns and try to be funny. Now it’s pure emotion, it’s just what football is all about.

“You always have to believe as a striker you are going to score and that feeling when you do is what motivates you. You don’t get it anywhere else in life, really, the adrenaline of seeing thousands of people going nuts, that’s what you want.

“Once you do it a couple of times you want to keep doing it, it motivates you to get in the right positions and take chances.”

The winning moment in a game that could have gone either way, Boyce had cleared a Paul Hanlon effort off the line earlier in proceeding­s. Craig Wighton had given Hearts the lead and Christian Doidge equalised to push the game into extra time.

After Kevin Nisbet hit the bar from the spot, Boyce almost grabbed the winner from open play but was denied by the post.

But he was clinical from the spot. And, if he gets a similar opportunit­y this time, he is hopeful he has drilled home enough in practice to repeat the

feat and give him the chance to celebrate with a sold-out Hearts end.

“I remember I missed the big chance. But we got the penalty and I scored and won so I’d take the same again. It’s a different game and we just have to take it as it comes.

“We were a Championsh­ip team then and probably expected to lose. So it doesn’t matter what happens – it’s who turns up on the day and who deals with situations the best.

“Anywhere I have been, even with Northern Ireland and stuff, when you’re preparing for a knockout game you practice penalties.

“You get in your mind what you want to do and just keep practising until you get it perfect, just so when you are in that situation you can calm down and relax and do what you have been training to do.

“It does happen in the lead up to a big game. Everyone has been hitting penalties the last few days. I’m sure that will be been more the case towards the end of the week.

“We practice against Craig [Gordon] – and if you score against him you’re doing well. It doesn’t matter who is in goal, you have to believe if you hit a good enough penalty noone is going to stop it.

“But it’s good to practice against someone like him, he can lie down and cover the whole net!”

With the promise of European group stage football and all the glory and financial awards associated with that at stake, as well as capital pride and a shot at silverware on 21 May, Hearts will be buoyed by last week’s derby.

A slow start by the Tynecastle side saw Hibs take an early lead but they bounced back and while it ended in a convincing home win, Boyce warns it may not be as straightfo­rward this weekend.

“Saturday was probably the best atmosphere I have played in at Tynecastle. It’s what you want – when they went 1-0 up their fans were brilliant and then it was back and forth. When big tackles go in you hear the cheer that changes the momentum of the game. As a footballer those are the ones you want to be involved in. But it’s going to be difficult. They will have seen what we did last week as well and that makes it tougher when you are playing the same team two weeks in a row.”

While there are a number of Hearts players with experience of beating their rivals at Hampden, Boyce also got the better of Hibs while at Ross County.

He is self-deprecatin­g when analysing his own performanc­e in the 2016 League Cup, maintains he will settle for another poor personal performanc­e and a winner’s medal.

“I was horrendous the day we won it with Ross County. We played Hibs in the final and scored in the last minute. It’s an unbelievab­le achievemen­t when you win a trophy. When the team comes together to celebrate, it is massive.

“But we know we have a game ahead of that before we think about winning.”

And, having been through it all before, he is too experience­d to get ahead of himself and give Hibs anything to rail against.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? 2 Liam Boyce, left, admitted he had a dreadful game when he played in Ross County’s League Cup final win over Hibs in 2016
2 Liam Boyce, left, admitted he had a dreadful game when he played in Ross County’s League Cup final win over Hibs in 2016
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? 0 Liam Boyce could laugh about the knee-slide towards an empty stand when he put Hearts ahead against Hibs in the 2020 semi-final.
0 Liam Boyce could laugh about the knee-slide towards an empty stand when he put Hearts ahead against Hibs in the 2020 semi-final.
 ?? ?? 0 Craig Gordon keeps goal while his team-mates practice penalty-taking ahead of the semi-final
0 Craig Gordon keeps goal while his team-mates practice penalty-taking ahead of the semi-final

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom