Name
Hearts
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Next Event
FC Copenhagen vs Hearts (12 Dec)

Head Coach

Neil Critchley

League Position
11

Recent League Form ➡


Established
1874 (150 years old)

Sport
Soccer

Venue

Tynecastle Park

(19,852 Capacity)

Equipment Clearart

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Primary Colours

Location
Gorgie, Edinburgh, Scotland

Nicknames

Competitions
Scottish Premier League
Scottish FA Cup
Scottish League Cup
UEFA Europa League
UEFA Conference League

Last Edit
smudgie: 10/Nov/24
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Upcoming
12 Dec FC Copenhage - Hearts
15 Dec Kilmarnock - Hearts
19 Dec Hearts - Petrocub Hî
22 Dec Hearts - St Johnstone
26 Dec Hearts - Hibernian

Results
07 Dec Hearts 2 - 0 Dundee FC
01 Dec Hearts 1 - 1 Aberdeen
28 Nov Cercle Brugg 2 - 0 Hearts
23 Nov Hearts 1 - 4 Celtic
10 Nov Rangers 1 - 0 Hearts


Description Available in:
Heart of Midlothian Football Club, commonly known as Hearts, is a professional football club in Edinburgh, Scotland. The team competes in the Scottish Professional Football League. Hearts, the oldest and most successful football club in the Scottish capital, were formed in 1874, their name influenced by Walter Scott's novel The Heart of Midlothian. The club crest is based on the Heart of Midlothian mosaic on the city's Royal Mile; the team's colours are maroon and white.

Hearts have played home matches at Tynecastle Park since 1886. After converting the ground into an all-seater stadium in 1990, it now has a capacity of 19,852 following the completion of a rebuilt main stand in 2017. Their training facilities are at the Oriam, Scotland's national performance centre for sport, where they also run their youth academy.

Heart of Midlothian have won the Scottish league championship four times, most recently in 1959–60, when they also retained the Scottish League Cup to complete a League and League Cup double – the only club outside of the Old Firm to achieve such a feat.

The club's most successful period was under former player turned manager Tommy Walker from the early 1950s to mid 1960s. Between 1954 and 1962 they won two league titles, one Scottish Cup, and four Scottish League Cups, and also finished inside the league's top four positions for 11 consecutive seasons between 1949–50 and 1959–60. Jimmy Wardhaugh, Willie Bauld and Alfie Conn Sr., known as the Terrible Trio, were forwards at the start of this period with wing half linchpins Dave Mackay and John Cumming. Wardhaugh was part of another notable Hearts attacking trinity in the 1957–58 league winning side. Along with Jimmy Murray and Alex Young, they set the record for the number of goals scored in a Scottish league winning campaign (132). In doing so, they also became the only side to finish a season with a goal difference exceeding 100 (+103).

Hearts have also won the Scottish Cup eight times, most recently in 2012 after a 5–1 victory over Hibernian, their local rivals. All four of Hearts' Scottish League Cup triumphs came under Walker, most recently a 1–0 victory against Kilmarnock in 1962. Their most recent Scottish League Cup Final appearance was in 2013, where they lost 3–2 to St Mirren.

In 1958, Heart of Midlothian became the third Scottish and fifth British team to compete in European competition. The club reached the quarter-finals of the 1988–89 UEFA Cup, losing to Bayern Munich 2–1 on aggregate.


Team Members



Thorn

McEneff

Smith

Souttar

Simms

Haring

Halliday

Popescu
= Player Contract years remaining
Showing 0 to 26 (Total: 26)




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2011-2012

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1997-1998

1962-1963

1959-1960

1959-1960

1958-1959

1957-1958

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1954-1955

1905-1906

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1896-1897

1895-1896

1894-1895

1890-1891


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