Derek McInnes taking no notice of Hearts links

Published 24th Sep 2024

Derek McInnes is taking no notice of links with Hearts and believes he can improve on Kilmarnock's impressive season last time out.

The former St Johnstone, Bristol City and Aberdeen manager has been installed as one of the favourites to replace the sacked Steven Naismith but he is enjoying life at Rugby Park.

McInnes took the Ayrshire side from mid-table in the Championship to European football in two-and-a-half years and he is focused on kick-starting their William Hill Premiership campaign against Dundee United on Saturday.

When asked if the Tynecastle reports were a compliment, the 53-year-old said: "Not really, no. I actually don't take any notice of it. My job and focus is here.

"I'm at an age now where, when you get linked with things or your job's under pressure, people talking about it, I actually don't really see much merit in dwelling on it.

"My job is fully on Kilmarnock and it's just about making sure that we are the team I want us to be, being relevant as we were last season, people giving us plenty of plaudits and mixing it and landing a few blows on bigger teams with bigger budgets.

"I believe we can be that team again. I actually think we've got the potential to be better than last year and that excites me and hopefully we can start by getting a winning performance again on Saturday."

Naismith was the second Premiership manager to lose his job this season following Craig Levein's exit from St Johnstone the previous week.

The former Killie player led Hearts to a comfortable third-place finish in his one full campaign but paid the price for eight consecutive defeats.

McInnes has spoken to both managers and felt they were both harshly treated after meeting their goals last season.

The former Rangers midfielder is now the longest-serving manager in the Premiership having taken charge in January 2022 but even he appreciates how fragile a job it can be.

"You've got to win games, clearly, but you've got to have that connection," he said.

"The strongest connection you can have to get results is through your dressing room and have that strong connection with your players.

"You've also got the strong connection with the key decision makers at the club, or the key decision maker. And that's got to be there. There's got to be similarities, understanding, there's got to be a similar mindset, similar ambition and way of working.

"But the hardest one at times is working that real connection with supporters because supporters feel there's always somebody maybe better there, another option that could maybe in their eyes get better results.

"Having those key connections is vitally important and you need to work hard at it.

"But when you lose that sort of connection with the dressing room, key decision maker, supporters, then the job becomes really difficult.

"And you've seen it so often, now, the clamour for 'right, there's one manager who's the next one?' It's the betting odds, the newspapers report on it, pundits talk about it. It's just the way it is. It's not going to change no matter what we all think, and it's just the law of the jungle really.

"You've just got to try and keep your head above water and keep yourself going and believe in what you're doing and trust your way of working."

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