The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Hearn ponders his wasted and fires a warning to SPFL

- By Danny Stewart

“You might be a pauper, but you need to act like you are a king.

“Don’t have your head d ow n , looking at your shoelaces. Get your head up and show a bit of pride.

“You might not have much at the start. But if you believe in yourself, and have a bit of passion and positivity, you can make great things happen.

“But people need to sing from the same songsheet. Any negativity must be stamped out because the message it sends always spreads like wildfire.”

Two years ago, Hearn ruled out any chance of him becoming SFA chief executive, and stated he would need to own Scottish football to effect the changes he felt necessary.

There remains absolutely no chance of that happening, but the Dagenham- born multi- millionair­e is clear on what he sees as the best way ahead for the SPFL.

“I understand the situation because these are tough times, with worse around the corner, and people are scrapping for what little there is on the table,” he continued.

“If there is yourself and your brother, but only enough food for one of you, then you are going to fight to get fed.

“What you need in these times is somebody to bring a bit of order to proceeding­s, and here I would be looking to management.

“You want someone to take charge. To say: ‘Right, this is what we are doing, this is the direction we are taking. Now get in line’.

“I read the leaders of the SPFL saying they were merely representa­tives of the clubs, and I thought: ‘Big mistake. Seriously big mistake’.

“Do that, and you are conceding power to a load of businessme­n with big egos to satisfy, and who are motivated by the self- interests of their clubs.

“Leave them to their own devices and you are never going to get them all rowing in the same direction.

“Now, I get that there are politics involved, and that everyone is wary of not making mistakes.

“Add that together, and you get people taking a lot of time out to consider things because it is safer that way.

“But sometimes you have to be brave, sometimes you to have to take a risk because in any crisis, there will be opportunit­ies.

“Of course, there is going to be a lot of hardship for a lot of people. But, at the same time, sport will come back, and those in charge need to be ready for the return and ready to deliver.

“I go back to my own time with darts, when I first got involved. The people in charge did a very gutsy thing back then.

“They came to me and said: ‘ We are stuck. We can’t take this any further – but we think you can’.

“I said: ‘Okay, I will do it – but it has to be on my terms. It has to be my way or the highway’.

“I think of myself as a benevolent dictator. I have done a lot of good for the sports I have been involved in.

“But I have done some good for myself too in the process, I work to earn money and I have been successful in doing so.

“I’m not saying that is possible for Scottish football, but the principle applies. I think this is a time for strong confident voices.

“There is huge uncertaint­y about every aspect of life, so you go back to the principles that guide you, decide what you want to achieve and then set out the best way to make it happen.

“Snooker will be back from the first of next month. There will be strict testing and new health and safety measures in place. But we go again.”

At that, the voice of Hearn, the man who loves to joke, is suddenly serious.

The return of profession­al sport will be many things – but it will be no laughing matter.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom