Glasgow Times

‘ Top category’ McKay tipped to make mark at late stage of season

- Joel Sked Football writer

FOR much of the season, Hearts have been robbed of the mercurial talents of Barrie McKay and his ability to see and execute passes that few in the league can replicate.

The 29- year- old has split opinion among the club’s support. And it will be interestin­g whether it is a case of absence making the heart grow fonder, or, at the very least, his absence increasing the appreciati­on of his skills, because there can be little doubt about the creative qualities he can inject into the team and into games.

One of the common complaints this campaign has been about the lack of risk- taking in possession, that final pass in a sequence, the awareness to spot a team- mate better placed.

Thirteen months ago, McKay sat in the club’s Oriam training base and discussed perception­s of his form openly. There was a view held that he had regressed following a fantastic 2021/ 22 season. He was one of the most creative players in the league, putting up numbers that competed with or bettered the likes of Jota, David Turnbull and Matt O’Riley, as well as James Tavernier and Ryan Kent.

McKay spoke of 20,000 managers in the stands and felt that critics “don’t see the full picture”.

Then head coach Robbie Neilson, sitting down once McKay had spoken, joked that it was the most he had heard the player speak. It was clear, however, that McKay felt strongly about the perception.

Simply looking at the bare facts, there was a regression from what was a fantastic season. The same could be said about the team in general. But even with Hearts sauntering to third spot in the Premiershi­p this campaign, there can be little doubt that he has been missed. Now, rather than looking back, it should be a case of looking forward.

Hearts head coach Steven Naismith is well aware of his talents and that he could still provide vital contributi­ons between now and the end of the season.

“He can because, on raw ability, Baz is in the top category of anybody at the club,” he said. “A guy like that coming back in will be good for the squad and good for him personally. Going back to competitio­n for places, everybody needs to play well to stay in the team.”

The 2- 1 win at St Mirren was just his sixth league appearance of the season, ninth in total. It has been a campaign that has been ravaged by injury. It started with recovery from an ankle issue, then came not one but two PCL injuries. Three letters McKay will hope to never see together again.

Naismith expressed sympathy for what he has gone through this campaign. After suffering his first PCL against PAOK in the Europa Conference League qualifier, McKay took all the necessary steps to get back in a good place, only for the same injury to occur but in a completely different manner to the first one.

There was even an understand­ing that this season could perhaps be cast to the side, written off, forgotten by the player, with attention turned to pre- season instead having not had a proper one this summer past.

That’s not been the case, perhaps aided by knowledge and experience gained from his first PCL rehab.

“That’s the frustratin­g part,” Naismith said. “Baz is now an experience­d player and a leader. His day- to- day routine is all really good. The frustratio­n is that he does all that, then gets an injury which sets him back for months. What chance have you got?

“He has been really strong. With this second injury, I’ve been surprised at how hard he has worked. When I did my second knee injury, I was really deflated. To have two really bad injuries that close together, there could be that element of: ‘ I’m writing this season off.’ He is not. He has been the opposite. I would say he has worked harder this time than he did at the start, which tells you all you need to know about his character.”

McKay has come off the bench in the last two games as he builds back toward full- match sharpness. While there are no restrictio­ns on his game time, the coaching staff are managing the playmaker carefully to ensure no further injuries.

“His performanc­es in training have been good and he is getting back to sharpness, so he is available for selection,” Naismith said. “If we think he’s ready to start then we will start him. If not, we will wait. There isn’t any condition on his minutes.

“This season has been really frustratin­g for him. The injuries haven’t been avoidable, they have just happened and they have set him back twice. Hopefully, he can contribute enough from now till the summer that he looks back on it as a worthwhile season through the hard times.”

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 ?? ?? Barrie McKay is back in action for Hearts after a season marred by injuries
Barrie McKay is back in action for Hearts after a season marred by injuries

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