SPFL Ladbrokes Premiership
Sat 5 April, 2014. Kick Off: - 15:00
Firhill Stadium
Recent home games seem to have come with added significance for our visitors. Tomorrow we mark the end of the pre-split fixtures with a Hearts side that have not once, but twice, recorded results that have prevented them from having relegation confirmed.
Jags boss Alan Archibald took in their game with Aberdeen on Wednesday night and he is under no illusions as to how tough tomorrow’s game is going to be.
“The fact that they scored such a late goal against Aberdeen on Wednesday, a match I was at, after having a player sent off shows the great spirit that they have. Gary Locke must be very proud of his players in that respect and we know that we are in for a very tough game tomorrow not least because Hearts will be determined to stave off relegation for another week at least. We are confident though that we can get the result we need. The Celtic game aside our recent home form has been good and we will be looking to continue that on Saturday.”
Almost inevitably at this stage of the season the manager has a few injury problems to contend with although, thankfully, nothing that he hasn’t already had to deal with.
Said Alan;
“Isaac Osbourne and Sean Welsh are still out. Aaron Muirhead had his surgery on Thursday and we think he will be out for about a month. Conrad Balatoni is also still out and we are hoping he will be back for the first or second match after the split. Lee Mair and Gabriel Piccolo though have done well in recent games and I’m confident they will do so today as well. We will have Kallum Higginbotham back from suspension tomorrow which is a big boost for us.”
Finally, the manager took a look ahead to the post-split fixtures which were confirmed earlier this week.
“They were released were pretty much what we expected; we thought we would get the two at home we did and the three away. That means we will have played everyone home and away twice this season and that is fair enough. I don’t think anyone in the bottom six fears anyone and it’s all to play for as we near the end of the season.”
Partick Thistle Stats
Current Form – Last Five Games
W D L F A
1 2 2 6 9
Scorers Season 2013-2014
Kris Doolan 8
Kallum Higginbotham 6
Steven Lawless 5
Lyle Taylor 5
Aaron Muirhead 4
Conrad Balatoni 2
Christie Elliott 3
Chris Erskine 2
Ross Forbes 1
Gary Fraser 1
Lee Mair 1
Stephen O’Donnell 1
Aaron Taylor-Sinclair 1
Last Game
Scottish Premiership
Saturday March 29th 2014
St Johnstone 1, Partick Thistle 1
Hearts Stats
Current Form – Last Five Games
W D L F A
1 1 3 7 11
Scorers Season 2013-2014
Last Game
Scottish Premiership
Wednesday April 2nd 2014
Hearts 1, Aberdeen 1
Last Meeting
Jamie Hamill 8
Callum Paterson 7
Danny Wilson 4
Dale Carrick 3
Ryan Stevenson 3
Jamie Walker 3
Sam Nicholson 2
Jason Holt 1
Billy King 1
Jordan McGhee 1
Kevin McHattie 1
Scott Robinson 1
David Smith 1
Last Meeting
Scottish Premiership
Sunday January 5th 2014
Hearts 0, Partick Thistle 2
Teams
Hearts: MacDonald, McHattie, McGowan, Stevenson, Robinson, Paterson (Carrick), Walker (Nicholson), McKay, Smith (B King), Tapping, McGhee.
Thistle: Fox, O’Donnell, Taylor-Sinclair, Muirhead, Balatoni, Craigen, Bannigan, Lawless (Baird), Piccolo, Taylor (Doolan), Higginbotham (Elliott).
Scorers
Thistle: Taylor (13), Taylor-Sinclair (40)
Crowd: 13,763
Match Details
Scottish Premiership
Saturday April 5th 2014
Partick Thistle v Hearts
Kick-off: 3:00pm
Admission Details
Match Officials
Referee: Stephen Finnie
Assistant Referees: Gavin Harris and Ross Haswell
Fourth Official: Bobby Madden
Other Fixtures
SCOTTISH PREMIERSHIP
Dundee United v Celtic
Hibernian v Aberdeen (Monday)
Kilmarnock v St Johnstone
RossCounty v Inverness Caledonian Thistle (Friday)
St Mirren v Motherwell
An afternoon that had started in such promising fashion for Thistle ended in a potentially damaging defeat as Hearts, despite having their relegation confirmed at full-time, ran out deserved 4-2 winners as Thistle produced arguably their poorest display of the season.
Manager Alan Archibald made two changes to the side that had drawn at St Johnstone. Kallum Higginbotham was free of suspension and he replaced Christie Elliott in the starting eleven while Kris Doolan was preferred to Prince Buaben.
The wisdom in including Doolan was clear to see when Thistle’s leading scorer fired his team into a 1-0 lead after just five minutes. Doolan was able to use his pace to get clear of the Hearts defence and his powerful finish left MacDonald in the Hearts goal with no chance of saving.
Spurred on by that early goal Thistle began to take a complete grip of the game and could easily have put the game beyond the reach of Hearts inside the first 20 minutes. In the 16th minute Lyle Taylor missed a glorious chance to double the Thistle lead. While Hearts were appealing for handball against Kallum Higginbotham; Higginbotham was able to thread the ball through to Taylor who from just a few yards inside the box lashed the ball over the bar when he really should have hit target at the very least.
Three minutes later Kris Doolan was close to his second goal of the afternoon. Chris Erskine and Kallum Higginbotham combined to set him up but MacDonald was equal to his shot.
Inexplicably Thistle stopped playing at this point allowing Hearts to grow in confidence and exert increasing pressure on the Thistle goal. The first warning sign came after 33 minutes when Paul Gallacher was required to make a stunning save to keep out a Robinson header from point blank range.
Three minutes later Hearts again threatened and Billy King should have done better than shoot wide of goal when he managed to get clear of the Thistle defence.
Gallacher was again tested in the 43rd minute when he pushed away a fierce effort from King and there were loud appeals for a Hearts penalty when Carrick went down inside the Thistle box with half-time fast approaching.
Thistle though were to be denied the chance to take an increasingly fragile looking lead into the dressing room at half-time when Carrick was able to nod the ball home from close range almost on the stroke of half-time.
Surely there would be an improvement from Thistle upon resumption of the game? Not a bit of it. Indeed Hearts took the lead just five minutes after the restart when Billy King thundered a shot high past Gallacher and into the Thistle net.
There was little in the way of response from Thistle and just past the hour mark Hearts were able to increase their lead when negligent defending at a corner allowed Ryan Stevenson to guide a header into the corner of the Thistle net.
There was worse to follow for Thistle just seven minutes later. Aaron Taylor-Sinclair was robbed of the ball as he attempted to push forward down the left hand side and seconds later Stevenson was steering his second goal of the afternoon beyond the reach of Paul Gallacher.
It took Thistle until 6 minutes from the end of the game for them to have their first effort of the second half on the Hearts goal and even then a Lyle Taylor effort merely trundled past the post.
Thistle did, however, pull a goal back in the 88th minute. A clever dummy from substitute Steven Lawless gave Jordan McMillan a shooting chance and the full-back made no mistake with a crisp low drive.
Thistle could even have managed a third goal before the finish with MacDonald making an excellent save to keep out an effort from Lawless with James Craigen sending the loose ball into the side netting.
It was by then a case of far too little far too late and with St Mirren staging a late comeback in their match against Motherwell to win 3-2 Thistle dropped into the play-off position.
There was an obvious sense of gloom and despondency in the Thistle camp at the end of Saturday’s game with Hearts and when [link:HOME] caught up with manager Alan Archibald after the game we asked him if he could account for what he had just witnessed from his team?
“No I don’t think that we can. We stressed to the boys that the three points had to mean more to usthan they did to Hearts and in the first 20 minutes it looked like that but it soon changed. We stopped doing what we were doing ever so well and that changed the pattern of the game.”
Alan continued;
“We set up with a game plan and it was working. I don’t know if the players thought that it was going to be easy but I’ve seen this Hearts team many times and they have great fighting character and they showed that.”
Not for the first time this season Thistle were left cursing missed chances that could possibly have had a major impact on the outcome of the game; Lyle Taylor missing an excellent chance that would have put Thistle 2-0 ahead.
“That would have made a big difference”, said Archibald referring to that chance before continuing;
“We’ve found out all this season that if you don’t take your chances then that can come back to haunt you and it certainly did today. It wasn’t long after that chance that Hearts got back into the game.”
Alan went on;
“It wasn’t a surprise when they equalised. We started to give them possession in our half and we dropped a little too deep for my liking and we gave them too much space. To be honest at the stage in the game they could easily have been 2-1 up.”
The manner in which the goals were lost was another major disappointment for the Thistle manager.
“Regardless of how we were playing the goals that we gave away were poor goals. Two of them came from set plays and that kills you. We had gone two up front as well with Kris Doolan up top with Lyle Taylor in an attempt to get back into the game. We went two up front because this was a game that were looking to win and we were a goal behind and we wanted to get back into the game as quickly as possible and that’s what we tried to do.”
In sharp contrast with Hearts, Alan felt his side produced a fearful display.
“After the first 20 minutes I think Hearts played with a freedom and we didn’t. We played with a fear. You can’t be fearful in the position that we are in. You have to stand up and show character and spirit and that’s what we’ll need to do to stay in this league.”
Two late goals for St Mirren and a 3-2 win over Motherwell dropped Thistle into the dreaded play-off slot making it a truly awful afternoon for Thistle.
“It certainly does but that’s the nature of the beast, we’ll find that out in the next five games. We are all playing each other and something has to give in each game. The one thing about the split is that you know that if you win your games you will be fine but you need to go out and win those games.”