Jason Holt aims to grab the limelight at Hearts
Jason Holt is hoping to make an impact at Hearts. Picture: SNS
THE stage is set for Jason Holt to make a major impact at Hearts this year. Paulo Sergio has promoted the 18-year-old from the club’s youth academy and now considers him a first-team squad member.
From conversation, it’s clear Holt isn’t overawed by the opportunity.
He no longer trains with Darren Murray’s under-19s despite being eligible for the youth team until the end of the season. After a five-week loan spell at First Division Raith Rovers, which ended earlier this month, Sergio decided the diminutive midfielder should return to Riccarton and join Hearts’ senior squad.
The manager then named him amongst the substitutes for recent matches against St Mirren and Inverness.
Holt has taken the promotion in his stride. A mature, level-headed youngster, he is neither carried away with nor intimidated by his new status. To him, this is another rung on the football development ladder he first stepped on to aged nine, when he left Musselburgh Windsor Boys’ Club to enrol in the Hearts youth academy.
Since then, the progress has been relentless. Holt has represented Scotland at youth level and earned an under-21 call-up last year.
He was the SPL Under-19 Player of the Year last season, making a first-team debut in the final game of the campaign, and signed a new, three-year contract with Hearts just weeks later to ensure he remains at Tynecastle until 2014.
To look at him, he is slight and short on stature. But therein lies a multitude of talent. Murray regards him as “the best young player I’ve ever coached”, which is quite an accolade when you consider the graduates of Riccarton in recent years. Sergio clearly concurs with Murray’s view that Holt is one for the future.
“My loan was due to expire at Raith and John Murray [director of football] took me aside and said the gaffer wanted me back at Hearts,” Holt told the Evening News.
“Obviously, I was really happy to hear that because it means I’m in his thoughts. He also said I’d be training with the first team every day, and that’s been the case since I came back.
“Being on the bench against St Mirren and Inverness was great. As well as training with the first team each day, it’s nice that I’m in the squad at the end of the week. Scott Robinson, Ryan McGowan and David Templeton are in there just now and that’s what you want as a young player coming through.”
There are inevitable good-natured jibes from team-mates to contend with, but Holt regards those as a small price to pay. “You get wee comments like ‘gaffer’s son’ and things like that. Whoever is involved with the first team gets a bit of stick. Fraser [Mullen] had it recently when he played, they were calling him ‘first-teamer’ and stuff. It’s just a bit of banter and it shows the spirit we have. It helps that the under-19s are winning a lot and doing really well, so we can afford to have a laugh and a joke about the place.”
On a more serious note, Holt is well aware of the long-term implications of Hearts’ finances and how they may shape the senior squad this year and next. “For young players, if Hearts are looking to offload some experienced guys then it gives us more of a chance to play,” he said.
“Every young player would thrive on that chance. The boys give that wee bit more because they know players might be leaving. They think, ‘I could get a chance here’ and it makes them work harder.
“My aim is to push on and play in the Hearts first team. That’s my ambition for the moment. I’m looking for gradual progression and if it happens that way I’d be delighted. Players my age are in their last year at under-19 level but we know there are a lot of players below us who can make it to the first team as well. If they listen to Darren and what he’s telling them, they will do well here.
“Hearts have shown that they will give young players an opportunity. All the coaches at every age level at Hearts are good and I was taught well by all of them. I couldn’t single one out, although Darren had a big influence on me latterly, so I have to thank him.
“He played me at a young age when I first went into the under-19s and I’m sure everyone would agree with me that he’s a good coach. He gets the best out of players. A lot of people don’t see the amount of work Darren puts in. I think he is undervalued, but now people are beginning to notice him because the 19s are doing so well.”
Success brings a pressure all of its own, but Holt is undoubtedly equipped to deal with expectations rising. Winning the SPL Under-19 Player of the Year award – an honour based on voting from opposition coaches – forced him to handle some gushing praise at a tender age.
“Expectations do rise when you get these awards,” he admitted.
“I just had to keep working hard because there’s nothing else you can do. You’ve won the award so you keep doing what you were doing beforehand because that’s what get you there in the first place. Most of the comments about me are nice and encouraging so I take them all on board. If it’s coaches’ comments, I try to take in what they’ve said and learn from it.”
Previous flirtations with the first-team didn’t always go as smoothly as Holt’s recent step up. A smile cracks across his baby face as he recalls an invitation to join the senior squad on the 2010 pre-season training camp at the Il Ciocco complex in Tuscany, Italy. He was just 16 at the time.
“That was the first big involvement I’d had with the first team. I hadn’t even trained with them,” he explained. “We knew the first team were going to Italy but none of us ever thought we’d be considered to go. The under-19s and reserves were due to go to Oban on the Friday and I was on my way to the academy that day knowing the first team were leaving for Italy on the Saturday.
“On my way, Darren phoned me saying I had to see him straight away. When I got there he said the gaffer [then Jim Jefferies] wanted a word with me. I went upstairs not knowing if it would be good news or bad. Thankfully it was good. The gaffer sat me down and said, ‘we want you to come with us to Italy.’ I was delighted. But then I remembered my passport was out of date. On the Saturday morning, I had to go to Glasgow first thing to get a new one sorted out.”
That week in Italy proved an eye-opener, although nowhere near as much as the recent loan spell at Raith.
“You get taught a different aspect of the game there,” said Holt. “At under-19 level, the way Darren has taught us to play, it’s total football all the time. We play a passing game based around one and two touches. Then you go to Raith and they’re looking for three points every week, so it’s a fight and a battle.
“That’s the different side to the game I learned. I think it’s a part of football that you need to learn. Every player needs to have that side to their game and I learned a lot from being at Raith. It helped make me a better player.”
Now he is eager to put everything into practice and gradually impose himself in the Hearts first team. The opportunity awaits, and the sky would appear to be the limit for Jason Holt.
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Comments
There are 10 comments to this article
Page 1 of 1
Hammy1874
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 11:40 PMCompare and contrast the riches coming through the ranks at Hearts to the desperate scraping about and loan deals being done by the relegation fodder.
waspy100
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 06:51 PM#6 Read that twice and still don't understand what you are trying to say.
waspy100
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 06:48 PMHolt comes across as an intelligent and ambitious young man who is going to have a future in the game. Well done and good luck to him. Think next season we will see more of our young players coming to the fore just hope we can keep some of the old pros to guide them.
what a chancer
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 05:10 PMsergio wont over do the youth unless thats all he has got as have past managers tried the mix and match with the fax machine.
what a chancer
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 05:08 PMthe last time sergio changed the time with vigour he used the rehab mob and the hanger ons,butcher done with youth and their endeavour to shine gave inverness the upper edge ,palo will only do this like past managers if the youngsters are his only option.and im sure vlads watching this on the chinese whisper machine.
Feeno
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 04:52 PM4 Denis P is a defensive midfielder, St Mirren we were down to ten men, a few of the lads got a game in the cup game. We have currently Ryan McGowan, Scott Robinson, Temps, Novi, Driver and Johnson all played who have came through the U19's.
Super Marius
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 03:19 PMAm I the only one sick to death about hearing how brilliant our U19s team is, yet none of them seem to warrant even just a subs appearance? Granted, some of them may be out on loan but even before then they were all getting hyped up. Prime example at the weekend was that huddy Obua getting thrown on for the last 15mins when we're trying to get an equaliser. What is he going to add? The boy Pyrychenko (apologies for the spelling!) was on the bench having just returned from a loan spell where I'm led to believe he did quite well and yet big Dave is the one we turn to in our hour of need. I watched Pyrychenko (again apologies for the spelling) in the warm up prior to the game and his shooting was phenomenal. Certainly lived up to the reports I'd been hearing, he was thrashing them in. Games like St Mirren and Dunfermline recently when you're three or even four goals ahead you should be looking to put these lads on and bed them in amongst the more experienced lads. If Holt as well is now classed by Sergio as a first team player then lets see what he can do.
Hearthammer
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 02:39 PMIf he's ahlf the player that the last Holt was (Davie) I'll be very happy!
Duncan D' Orderly
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 02:35 PMA heart warming story for a change that didn't involve, (fire sale, debt, R.S, etc, etc.) They keep banging on obout his size, but the best player in the world today is no giant, not sure how tall Temp is......
Please choose a name
Thursday, January 26, 2012 at 01:27 PMMore good news about young up and coming academy players to gladden the Hearts!
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