BY ALAN TEMPLE – @CCP_Sport
HIBS boss Neil Lennon admits he learned lessons from Hearts’ demolition of Rangers after insisting he is nonplussed by criticism of Sunday’s turgid Edinburgh derby.
The Tynecastle stalemate has been widely panned this week, with both sides struggling to adapt to a dreadful pitch and the encounter turning into a war of attrition.
However, Lennon unashamedly acknowledges that he set up to combat the Jambos and the conditions in Gorgie after watching the way his old foes Rangers succumbed to a 4-1 defeat earlier this month.
“If teams try to play when the ball is bobbling and teams press you, it becomes very difficult on poor pitches. It’s that time of year when they are starting to dry out and it is getting a bit crumbly and flakey.
“I have seen it many times before so I looked at the pitch on Sunday and said: ‘I don’t think I have great ball-playing centre halves today anyway, so we are going to be a little bit more direct and play in the final third and put them under pressure’.
“It might not have been a classic in people’s eyes, but I don’t care. I watched Rangers a few weeks earlier try to play a certain way and they got beat 4-1. Rangers are a stronger club than us with, better individuals, and Hearts did a number on them.
“I certainly didn’t want that happening to me or my team, especially in my first derby.”
While the Easter Road pitch is far from perfect, Lennon expects it to be more conducive to flowing football when the sides meet in the Scottish Cup replay next Wednesday.
Nevertheless, his priority will remains to progress by any means necessary.
Lennon continued: “People are saying that Easter Road will suit Hearts – well, it will certainly suit Hibs.
“But My philosophy is to win. Whether you win as well as you can or win by as little as you can, it certainly makes your weekend a lot better when you win.
“You can analyse your performance and say ‘we’ve played better and lost’. Well, it doesn’t make your night any better.”
However, before attention turns back to Hibs’ attempt to retain the Scottish Cup they travel to face Raith Rovers in league action on Saturday.
But he fully expects to face a reborn Raith following the appointment of former Easter Road player and manager John Hughes.
Lennon added: “I would imagine that John will give the players a lift. There will be a fresh approach and a fresh voice and John is very experienced now. I think it is a good appointment.
“But our players will know that and our focus is to win the game and stretch the lead. We can easily get sucked back into that and that’s what we want to avoid, so if we win on Saturday then we will be nine points ahead with 12 games to go. That would be a strong position to be in.”