'Hibs have fallen victim to Hearts success'published at 11:14 GMT 23 January
Image source, SNSIs Hibernian's season being made to look worse because fierce rivals Hearts are flying high at the top of the league?
Easter Road boss David Gray has come in for criticism after his side crashed out at the first Scottish Cup hurdle, losing 1-0 at second-tier Dunfermline in the fourth round last weekend.
In the Premiership Hibs sit fifth and are unbeaten in five league outings before Saturday's trip to Falkirk, but Hearts are 15 points better off than Gray's side.
"It's never nice seeing your rivals do so well," pundit and former striker Rory Loy told the BBC's Scottish Football Podcast.
"I don't think Hibs have had a bad season, I just think there was potentially an expectation there they could be slightly closer given the players they've got. They're only nine points behind the Old Firm, so it's not as if they're miles adrift.
"I do think they've fallen victim of Hearts' success slightly, but losing that game on Saturday wasn't clever in terms of the optics of the season.
"Going into the back end of the season, you always want a quarter or semi-final to look forward to, to keep things going if the league is in a place where it's not all that exciting."
Hibs women's head coach Joelle Murray believes Hibs need a strong end to the league campaign to ease fan anger over the cup exit.
"It's no surprise there is frustration and anger because at a club like Hibs there's that expectation to progress through the cup competitions, certainly at these early stages," said Murray.
"The frustrations are deserved, but when you flip back to the league, we're looking to extend the run to six, we've been on a fantastic run.
"However, going to Falkirk, it's not an easy place as a lot of teams have experienced this season."




















