WATCHING ENGLAND legend Bryan Robson helped teach Neil Lennon a valuable lesson when he was struggling for form as a player.
Now, with that message still ringing in his ears nearly three decades later, the Hibs manager insists the carrot and not the stick is his preferredĀ methodĀ to ease his team out of their slump in form.
The Easter Road outfit have failed to emerge victorious from their last five games and looked worryingly short on confidence last weekend as they allowed a two-goal lead to turn into a 2-2 draw with Dundee.
During his time in management, Lennon has seemingly not been too far from a touchline or post-match rant or two as his anger at sloppy performances has boiled over.
However, the former Celtic boss has this time avoided the sergeant major approach ahead of Saturday afternoonās trip to face Kilmarnock.
He said: āI think sometimes that is the perception of me ā but Iām not really like that.
āIāve played myself, Iāve been through low times and bad runs. So I know what the players are going through and we just try to get them through it.
āI remember when I was young at Crewe, I had come back from a back injury, was playing alright and then had a dip in form.
āThe old chief scout [Des Bennett] who had taken me to Crewe spoke to me. I had been subbed and he said: āWhatās wrong with you?ā I told him I was lacking a bit of confidence and, you know, if I missed a few passes, I wasnāt showing for the ball as I normally would.
āHe said to me: āI go to Man United every other week and watch the best midfielder in the country, Bryan Robson. And he misses passes. But he never hides, because he knows that one pass or that one run can make all the differenceā.
āIt was one of the best bits of advice I ever got throughout my whole career. Iām 47 now and I remember that as a 19-year-old.
āSo weāve all had it. And that was a very telling moment in my career.Ā I took it on board because you watch the best players and they do give it away sometimes. But they donāt drop their heads.
āUs, we just need to maybe scratch out a result here and there. Iām not making a huge issue out of it because I know weāre not a million miles away.ā
The dip has not necessarily come as a surprise to the Easter Road boss, given the loss of quality in John McGinn, Dylan McGeough, Scott Allan and Brandon Barker in the summer.
Against that backdrop, the Northern Irishman has questioned what should be expected of the team this season, and has admitted Hibs have āpossibly’ hit a āglass ceilingā.
However, he insists he is ready to continue cajoling his players back to form going into a crucial period that includes games against Celtic, Hearts and Rangers.
āIf you keep whipping them and it’s not working, you can’t keep whipping them because then you lose your impact and it goes in one ear and out the other,ā he added. āFor me that’s just common-sense management.
āThe last thing I’d want to hear as a player is a manager still on my back, on my back, on my back. It doesn’t work. It depends on the character of the player as well. It could be ‘well I’ll show you.’ But not everyone is built that way.
āThe spirit is good, they were really bright and bubbly on Friday. So, again, itās just taking that spirit and camaraderie onto the pitch.ā