The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Our clean-sheet record is the best in Europe this season

SAYS AUSTIN MACPHEE

- By Mark Guidi SPORT@SUNDAYPOST.COM

We’ve played nine teenagers in the first team this season. It shows we have a pathway from our academy

Austin MacPhee has praised Craig Levein for turning around the fortunes of Hearts and putting in place plans that will see the club prosper and improve for years to come.

Levein removed himself four months ago from his role as Director of Football to take over as Head Coach after Ian Cathro was sacked.

Results and performanc­es have improved. Youngsters from the club’s successful Academy have given opportunit­ies.

The Jambos defeated Cetic 4-0 to end the Parkhead side’s 60 game unbeaten run. Harry Cochrane, just 16, scored in that game.

They have also clocked up six clean sheets on the trot, the best defensive run in the 143-year history of the club.

It’s also the best record for the whole of Europe this season.

They are looking to make it seven without conceding this afternoon in the crucial William Hill Scottish Cup clash at home to Hibs.

Assistant boss MacPhee reckons that record gives Hearts a psychologi­cal edge for this game and knows the effort and graft at all levels that has been put in by Levein to put down foundation­s for success.

The highly-respected coach told The Sunday Post: “We had a very productive week in Spain during the winter break. To be together with the players morning, noon and night was beneficial.

“We learned a lot about the boys. We played three games – two against Bundesliga team and the other against Vitesse Arnhem. In all three games we finished the match with at least seven of our academy players on the park.

“We have played nine teenagers in the first team this season and it shows we have a pathway from our academy. Craig isn’t just selecting these boys to tick off a box, he is doing it because they have earned a chance.

“You have to remember that after the Vladimir Romanov era, the Heart of Midlothian Academy was completely broken.

“Ann Budge came in and appointed Craig. One of the main things he wanted to put right was the youth structure. We are doing that, for sure. During Ann’s era she has tripled the spend on the academy. That will prove to be solid investment year on year.

“I think one of the reasons Craig took the manager’s job was because he believed in our academy and felt there was quality there to feed into the first team squad.

“He is willing to give the youngsters a chance. And, also, he knows them all well. He sees them every week. Craig will sit in the dugout to watch a youth team game in the morning, sometimes as young as Under-12s, and then head to Tynecastle Park to take charge of the first team.

“He is not only full of encouragem­ent to everyone involved at the academy, he is also very supportive of his staff and wants myself, Liam Fox and Jon Daly to succeed.

“He has been criticised in the media, particular­ly towards the end of his Scotland career, but he can cope with it. He is thick skinned. He is also great company and very funny.

“But the serious side is there and he is very profession­al. Listen, he is a tried and tested manager. He is very clear in his ideas.

“He wanted us to be solid at the back and hard to score against. We’ve now had six clean sheets in a row and we are hard to beat. Indeed, our clean sheet record is the best in Europe this season. Juventus have the second best record, Barcelona are eighth.

“It’s something we are all very proud of, and I can see that determinat­ion in goalkeeper Jon McLaughlin and the defence not to concede. Christophe Berra is also really driving it forward. I think he has been in fine form.

“Our last competitiv­e match was away to Aberdeen and we could see the Aberdeen players getting frustrated as the game wore on because they hasn’t scored.

“I think the fact they knew we were in a good bit of form defensivel­y that it was on their minds. I think Derek McInnes and Tony Docherty could see it was just not going to be their day.

“We hope to continue that against Hibs. They have been to Tynecastle and played a certain way the last couple of times.

“The longer the games goes on on Sunday and Hibs haven’t scored, it could come into their thinking that they are just not going to pierce us open.”

Neil Lennon’s men defeated Hearts last season in this competitio­n. The first game was a draw at Tynecastle. Hibs won the replay comfortabl­y.

That night, Cathro’s team contained eight foreigners and three UK players and accusation­s followed that the spine of the team didn’t know enough of what was required to win a derby match.

Today, it’s likely to be many more Brits in the starting line-up.

MacPhee said: “They knocked us out of the Scottish Cup last season. At Tynecastle we didn’t really push to win with 30 minutes to go. We didn’t really make offensive substituti­ons. We should have been wanting to do it more on our own park rather than going into a replay.

“This time, we’re well aware it’s a Cup tie and you have to take ownership of the game, show the required level of responsibi­lity and be more offensive in the right moments of the game.”

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