The Scotsman

Naismith is a great admirer of Livingston’s fighting spirit

- Ross Mcleish sportts@scotsman.com

Hearts boss Steven Naismith insists lowly Livingston are far from a hopeless case ahead of their final pre-split clash at Tynecastle this afternoon.

While the Jambos are in a strong third spot in the cinch Premiershi­p, 11 points ahead of fourthplac­ed Kilmarnock with six fixtures remaining, the Lions are bottom, nine points behind secondbott­om Ross County and with their top-flight status hanging by a thread. However, Naismith will give David Martindale’s side every respect.

“The one thing from watching Livingston is yes, they are in a struggling position at the bottom of the table but I don’t think they have ever lost hope,” said Naismith, who confirmed captain and top scorer Lawrence Shankland has recovered from illness.

“There has not been a feeling watching them that the expectatio­n is that they are going down or they have lost fight.

“The Aberdeen game last week [0-0 at the Tony Macaroni Arena] is the same but in the games before that they have always shown they have been a threat and certain players in the team do carry a threat. “At times, yes, we will have the ball and we will try to break them down but that has been more normal this season than in previous seasons. So we are comfortabl­e in that setting but we have to be sharp on the ball, and see what opportunit­ies there are for us and if we get that win it takes us that bit closer to being third and for the individual, playing for a place in the semi-final.”

On that cup note, Naismith reiterated chief executive Andrew Mckinlay’s appeal to supporters to buy Scottish Cup tickets or risk not getting equal allocation­s again. The Gorgie club were handed what they said was an equal initial 21,000 allocation for their April 21

semi-final with Rangers at Hampden.

“Hopefully the fans enjoy what we have done this season and we manage to get them all sold,” said Naismith. “I think the progressio­n through the club has been massive over the last five or six years. I think we are on the cusp of getting to the next level at different parts of the club, one of them being our travelling support, where we consistent­ly sell out.

“Come the semi-finals you

ask for a big chunk and you want to sell out. Not many clubs in Scotland would take 16,500/17,000 but can we get it over the line? As a squad you want to have a packed stadium and the club have had to push to get that [equal split] and the consequenc­e is you could potentiall­y lose it in the future. We have had great support all season, hopefully we can sell it out and everyone turns up on a successful day to get to a final.”

Meanwhile, midfielder Jason

Holt understand­s Livingston’s perilous predicamen­t but, while there is still a survival possibilit­y, he will hold out hope. “We are hoping the point against Aberdeen can prove to be a big one,” said the former Hearts player.

“We know there is a bit of distance between us and Ross County but it is still achievable with the games we have got so we keep working towards that and try to turn it around if we can.”

 ?? ?? Hearts manager Steven Naismith in good spirits during training at Oriam yesterday
Hearts manager Steven Naismith in good spirits during training at Oriam yesterday

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