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The Changing Room uses the power of football to bring men together to unite and tackle mental health and wellbeing. By promoting men’s mental health through the beautiful game, The Changing Room’s 12 week course has helped Hibernian supporters across Edinburgh and beyond to manage their own mental health. The changing room is funded by the Movember Foundation, and is delivered in partnership by SAMH (Scottish Association for Mental Health), Hibernian Football Club and SPFL Trust. If you want to learn more about The Changing Room, please contact thechangingroom@samh.org.uk
CONTENTS
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HIBERNIAN O F F I C I A L
M ATC H DAY
P R O G R A M M E
06 | THE BIG INTERVIEW 14 | PLAYER SPONSORSHIP 16 | OPPOSITION
2 0 / 2 1
JAMIE MURPHY
31 | FIXTURES & RESULTS
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JAMIE MURPHY
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Jamie Murphy is out to make up for lost time after a stopstart first few months of his Easter Road career.
Older, wiser and shaped by different experiences throughout his career, he’s determined to shake off his recent niggling injuries and have a big influence on a Hibs team looking to compete for silverware and qualify for European football. YOU BROKE INTO MOTHERWELL’S FIRST-TEAM AT AN EARLY AGE AND HAVE PLAYED A LOT OF FOOTBALL SINCE. LOOKING BACK, IS THERE ANY WISDOM YOU’D WANT TO PASS ON TO YOUR YOUNGER SELF? Probably not to worry as much as I did. I was a big worrier when I was younger – about games, training, whether someone thought you were a good player or not and so on. Whereas now, feel like I have the confidence to just play and enjoy it.
I feel like I’m a good player and that I can help the team. WHAT HELPED YOU GET TO THAT POINT? Probably experience as much as anything else. I’ve made it to a certain level, and you don’t do that unless you’re a good player. WHAT FORM DID THAT ‘WORRY’ TAKE? Nerves, really. I was quiet when I was younger, but it was fine. I’d train, play, and go home. But when you make it to the first team, all of a sudden, there’s a lot more people watching you. I did wonder ‘what if I mess up here?’. DID YOU FEEL THAT EXTRA BURDEN OF EXPECTATION BECAUSE YOU WERE A CREATIVE PLAYER WHO WAS EXPECTED TO MAKE THINGS HAPPEN?
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That actually helped me overcome the nerves and feel better. Someone giving me the ball meant that they had confidence in me. Then the first time you go by an opposition player with the ball you think ‘I can do this’ and then you play your normal game. So, although it probably made me nervous to begin with, being out of any comfort zone like that from an early age made me a better player. WHO WERE THE GUYS WHO LOOKED OUT FOR YOU AT THAT STAGE? I was lucky at Motherwell to have good senior players around me, which the younger players at Hibs are fortunate to have here. I played in front of Steven Hammell, I had Keith Lasley inside one in the centre of midfield and Stephen Craigan was the club captain. It made a difference playing alongside them. They set the standards and, as I said, when they trusted you enough to give you the ball then it meant something. CREATIVE PLAYERS, BY THE NATURE OF THE ROLE, ARE GOING TO FAIL A LOT OF THE TIME TRYING TO MAKE SOMETHING HAPPEN. DID IT TAKE YOU TIME TO GET YOUR HEAD AROUND THAT? That’s one thing I was always pretty positive about and I try to pass that on to the boys here, particularly the ones like Jamie Gullan and Stevie Bradley who play in my position. You have to be prepared to keep asking for the ball and chances. That belief comes with experience. THEY’RE TWO VERY DIFFERENT CHARACTERS – BOTH BLESSED WITH A LOT OF ABILITY AND POTENTIAL. They both offer something different as players but they’re both very talented boys who work hard, in training and in games. Sometimes you see boys who are good but don’t back it up with hard work but that can’t be levelled at them. Jamie’s done well to force his way into the manager’s plans and get some goals. Stevie’s on the edge of making that breakthrough. As attacking players, if I can pass on anything that I think will help them then I will. I see a bit more of myself in Jamie, because he’s a bit quieter off the pitch. Stevie clearly has confidence and it’s great to see. He always wants the ball in training. He’s just learning about the rest of the game now. YOU GOT A LOT OF FIRST-TEAM FOOTBALL UNDER YOUR BELT BEFORE YOU TRIED YOUR LUCK IN ENGLAND WITH SHEFFIELD UNITED AND BRIGHTON. WHAT DID PLAYING DOWN SOUTH DO FOR YOU? It changed my full outlook on football. I remember for the first eight months that I hated it and wanted to come home. I’m a home-boy and I like to be near to my family and that was the first time I’d really been away. It was completely different down there. I played alongside Dave Kitson and I remember thinking ‘I watched you on the TV’. I doubted myself a bit more at that point and wondered if I could reach the level they were at. I was starting all over again. My career in Scotland didn’t really mean anything at that point. WAS THAT IN YOUR HEAD OR THE IMPRESSION YOU GOT FROM OTHER PEOPLE? Oh, other people. I didn’t get the impression they held the game up here in a high regard. The first eight months was tough, and I had to resist the urge to phone my Dad and tell him I wanted to come home. Gradually, though, things started to improve for me. Nigel Clough came in as manager and I went from being an ‘okay’ player to the one I thought I could be. Sheffield United was the one that really asked questions of me. It felt like it was a case of ‘you need to be the one who scores
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“
THE MANAGER HAS BEEN BRILLIANT WITH ME
“
JAMIE MURPHY ON XXXX
H I B E R N I A N FO OT B A LL C LU B
or assists’. I won their Player of the Year award and that got me a good move to Brighton. HOW AWARE WERE YOU OF THE DIFFERENT EXPECTATIONS AT EACH OF YOUR CLUBS? It’s not so much within the dressing room. It comes from supporters, first and foremost. At Sheffield United we could get 20,000 to a League One game on a Tuesday night. You can see again now just how big a club they are. If you didn’t win you knew all about it. It was obviously like that at Rangers and I’m sure it’s the same here. Brighton was a little bit different because it wasn’t as much of a football town. That’s not to say their supporters don’t care. There’s just a different feeling around it. IN GLASGOW YOU’D HAVE BEEN USED TO THE ATTITUDE OF A DRAW BEING DEEMED A DISASTER. I think that’s a good attitude and it’s one I want to take here with me. You have to win. I think we’ve all seen some players come into Scottish football who expect to have an easier time of it. They think it’ll be a walk in the park. A lot of them go back down the road with their tail between their legs. Others have the right attitude, adapt and enjoy it. WHAT MAKES IT A DIFFERENT KIND OF CHALLENGE IN SCOTTISH FOOTBALL? It’s a bit faster up here. Down south, in League One everyone is physical. There’s quality but there’s maybe not as much of it around. Everyone is a good player in the Championship and they’re physical. In the Premier League, the physicality drops a little but they’re all top players. It’s a bit slower and you get more time on the ball. The Championship is more like we’re used to in Scotland. We’re also obviously consumed by football here and I enjoy that side of it. Football’s an everyday passion. Brighton was maybe the only club I’ve been at where you could walk down the street and no-one would stop you. HOW DIFFERENT IS IT FOR YOUNG PLAYERS BREAKING THROUGH TODAY, WITH A HEIGHTENED LEVEL OF SCRUTINY WHERE SOCIAL MEDIA IS CONCERNED? We were talking about that recently. When I was coming through, I felt like a parttime footballer and a part-time cleaner. You cleaned everything – the boots, the dressing rooms, the stands after the game. I remember being in first-team squads, wearing my suit, and then having to wait on the opposition team leaving their dressing room so that I could get to work cleaning it. Washing the tunnel was one of my main jobs as well. There were times when I’d have to go up with a ladder and collect balls off the roof of the stand if they’d landed there during the game. I don’t remember hating it. It was just part of the apprenticeship. I look back on those days and it was brilliant. You’d be playing with your mates everyday and you were in from 9am to 5pm before getting the train home. There was definitely a value in it. It was an early lesson that football wasn’t going to be easy. You had to earn anything that came your way. The young boys still have to do some jobs around the place at Hibs and I think that’s a good thing. In terms of the social media attention, I think a lot of them have grown up with it so most of the dos and don’ts have become second nature. YOU’VE BEEN WORKING ON YOUR COACHING BADGES AS WELL. HAS THAT HELPED GIVE YOU A DIFFERENT INSIGHT?
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I’m in the middle of doing my B license and I’m at the assessment stage. It’s something I’ve always been interested in. I’ve probably taken something from every manager. I think I’ve had 14 or 15 of them, including some big characters like Nigel Clough, Terry Butcher, Mark McGhee, Stuart McCall and Chris Hughton. There’s a good range in there, with different ways of playing. I think that’s reinforced to me that there’s not one ‘right’ way to go about it. At Sheffield United I was an out-and-out winger and told not to worry about defending. At Brighton it was a case of defending to earn the right to play. My improvement as a player come as a result of adapting to those different styles. IS IT TOO EARLY TO SAY WHETHER YOU’D LIKE TO BE A MANAGER? No, that’s something I definitely want to try. I like the problem-solving aspect of it, being able to watch a game and pick apart a team’s strengths and weaknesses. I probably watch games in a different way now and it started when I was injured. I wasn’t able to train for the best part of a year, so I found myself taking down notes in a journal whenever I’d watch a game – about how teams would play, how they won or lost the game. Now I’m fit, I’ve not written as much down but I still take in the games with an analytical eye. Coaching is probably similar to playing in some respects in that it’s good to pick up experience at a lower level and work your way up. YOU WERE REALLY MAKING AN IMPACT BEFORE YOUR LAST HAMSTRING TWEAK. THAT MUST HAVE MADE IT DOUBLY FRUSTRATING FOR YOU. It was frustrating as I felt like I was just getting going and there’s a lot more to come from me. I’d love to say that I was able to cope better with injuries now than when I was younger, but the opposite is probably true. When you’re 18 you can run all day and probably don’t think as much about the extra little things you can do around it to take care of your body. Now I’m more professional in terms of the additional work, so it’s tougher to take when you still pick up the odd knock but it’s part of the game. Prehab training is a big thing for me. I’ll work to activate certain muscle groups for maybe an hour beforehand now. From 18 to 25 I’d have thought that was unthinkable but I do feel and see the benefit of it. It’s a lot more individualised now so you can work on your specific weaknesses. As we touched on, you’ve played a lot of football throughout your career – from an early age. You’ve only really had one significant injury. So how hard is it for a player whenever they hear the ‘injury-prone’ tag thrown around? There’s little more frustrating for a player. I read something about me recently – which I don’t often do – and it’s started off by saying that I’d had an injury-hit career. My first injury came when I was 28. I played for 11 or 12 years without an injury. I had a few niggles on the back of the one real injury that I had but that’s normal. The tag can be harder to shake off than the injuries. When you get a serious injury there’s a knock-on impact to your whole body. I have far more muscle now than I ever did prior to the knee injury, which makes you more susceptible to muscle injuries. So that’s where the prehab and recovery stuff becomes more important but I certainly don’t consider myself to be ‘injury-hit’. WE’RE SET UP FOR AN EXCITING SECOND HALF OF THE SEASON. WHAT ARE YOU HOPING TO ACHIEVE? I came here to challenge for honours and we’re in the semi-final of the Betfred Cup, so we want to see how far we can take that. I was speaking to my Dad the other day about this after scoring in the game against Celtic, which was a big game for us. You never know how many more goals you’re going to score or how many big games you’ll be lucky enough to be involved in so you can’t ever take it for granted. Everyone here wants a trophy and European football so that’s the objective.
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THE OPPOSITION
LIVINGSTON
Livingston are the visitors to Easter Road today for the second of our league encounters with the West Lothian side. Livi’s form has picked up of late, and as ever they present dangerous opposition.
M A NAGER
DAVID MARTINDALE Long-standing assistant David Martindale was confirmed in recent days by Livingston as their new Manager after a strong run of results achieved while he was in temporary charge following the resignation of Gary Holt. An initial four wins on the bounce as interim boss secured the role as the players responded to his leadership.
C AP TA IN
MARVIN BARTLEY Marvin Bartley was an important player in Hibernian’s run to Scottish Cup glory in 2016, and was in the squad for the final. A popular and leading figure on and off the pitch, Big Marv moved from Hibs to Livingston where his leadership qualities quickly earned him the armband. A tough, uncompromising opponent – but always a welcome one here at Easter Road.
K E Y PL AY ER
ALAN FORREST Flying forward Alan Forrest has scored three league goals so far this season, and a further 7 during the Club’s league cup run. The Club’s leading overall goalscorer, Hibernian will need to be mindful of his pace and eye for goal. 16
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L AS T MEETING
LIVINGS TON 1- 4 H I B E R NI A N
08 / 08 / 2020
Hibernian enjoyed one of our best wins of the season away at Livingston in August highlighted by a Nisbet hat-trick, however it has to be said that the Lions had a slow start to the campaign with uncharacteristic home form. Recent matches have seen results go much more their way and we can expect a tough encounter today.
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LOOKING BACK
HIBERNIAN v ROSS COUNTY EASTER ROAD STADIUM 30/12/20
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APR MARC H
FEB RUARY
JANUARY
D ECEMBER
NOV
OCTOB E R
SEPTEMB ER
AU GU S T
FIXTURES
DATE
H/A
Sat 01
H
Sat 08
OPPOSITION
K/ O
COMP ET IT ION
RESULT
K IL M A R N O C K
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
2-1
A
L IV IN G STO N
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
1-4
Tue 11
A
D U N D EE U T D
18:00
P R EMIER SHIP
0-1
Sat 15
H
M OT H ERW EL L
17:30
P R EMIER SHIP
0-0
Sun 23
A
ST JO H N STO N E
16:30
P R EMIER SHIP
0-1
Sun 30
H
A B ER D EEN
16:30
P R EMIER SHIP
0-1
Sat 12
A
ST M IR R EN
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
0-3
Sun 19
H
R A N G ERS
12:00
P R EMIER SHIP
2-2
Sat 26
A
C ELT IC
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
3-0
Fri 02
H
H A M ILTO N
19:45
P R EMIER SHIP
3-2
Wed 07
H
B RO R A R A N G ERS
19:45
BET FR ED CU P
3-1
Sat 10
A
COV E R A N G ERS
12:30
BET FR ED CU P
1-2
Tue 13
A
FOR FA R ATH LET I C
19:45
BET FR ED CU P
0-1
Sat 17
A
RO SS CO U N T Y
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
0-0
Sat 24
A
K IL M A R N O C K
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
0-1
Sat 31
A
H EA RTS
17:00
SCOT T ISH CU P
1-2
Fri 6
A
A B ER D EEN
19:45
P R EMIER SHIP
0-2
Sat 15
H
D U N D EE
16:30
BET FR ED CU P
4-1
Sat 21
H
C ELT IC
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
2-2
Tue 25
H
ST JO H N STO N E
19:00
P R EMIER SHIP
2-2
Sat 28
H
D U N D EE
15:00
BET FR ED CU P
1-0
Sat 05
A
M OT H ERW EL L
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
0-3
Sat 12
A
H A M ILTO N
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
0-4
Tue 15
A
A L LOA
20:00
BET FR ED CU P
1-2
Sat 19
H
D U N D EE U T D
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
1-1
Wed 23
H
ST M IR R EN
18:00
P R EMIER SHIP
1-0
Sat 26
A
R A N G ERS
12:30
P R EMIER SHIP
0-1
Wed 30
H
RO SS CO U N T Y
18:00
P R EMIER SHIP
0-2
Sat 02
H
L IV IN G STO N
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Mon 11
A
C ELT IC
19:45
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Sat 16
H
K IL M A R N O C K
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Sat 23
A
ST JO H N STO N E
17:30
BET FR ED CU P
-
Wed 27
H
R A N G ERS
19:45
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Wed 03
A
ST M IR R EN
19:45
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Sat 06
H
A B ER D EEN
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Wed 10
A
D U N D EE
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Sat 13
A
RO SS CO U N T Y
19:45
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Sat 27
H
M OT H ERW EL L
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Sat 06
A
ST JO H N STO N E
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Sat 20
A
L IV IN G STO N
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
-
Sat 03
H
H A M ILTO N
15:00
P R EMIER SHIP
-
OFFICIAL MATCHDAY PROGR AMME
27
HIBERNIAN HEAD COACH:
JACK ROSS Ofir Marciano David Gray (C) Paul Hanlon Ryan Porteous Paul McGinn Kyle Magennis Drey Wright Christian Doidge Martin Boyle Joe Newell Alex Gogic Stevie Mallan Kevin Nisbet Lewis Stevenson Jamie Murphy Jamie Gullan Stephen McGinn Melker Hallberg Scott Allan Darren McGregor Josh Doig Dillon Barnes Sean Mackie
1 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 13 14 15 16 18 19 22 20 23 24 25 33 43
REFEREE: ASSISTANT REFEREE: ASSISTANT REFEREE: FOURTH OFFICIAL:
LIVINGSTON MANAGER:
DAVID MARTINDALE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 14 15 17 18 21 22 25 27 29 32 33 39 40
Robby McCrorie Nicky Devlin Ciaron Brown Alan Lithgow Jack Fitzwater Marvin Bartley (C) Keaghan Jacobs Scott Pittman Jay Emmanuel-Thomas Craig Sibbald Alan Forrest Julien Serrano Josh Mullin Matej Poplatnik Scott Robinson Jason Holt Jack McMillan Scott Tiffoney Efe Ambrose Jon Guthrie Aaron Taylor-Sinclair Max Stryjek Steve Lawson Carlo Pignatiello Gary Maley
DAVID MUNRO GRAEME STEWART PAUL O’NEILL ALAN MUIR