
Kent excited about Aberdeen test
The big defender believes the Scottish Cup holders are, in his words, 'a good team' and the opening clash in the William Hill Premiership, live on Sky Sports, with a full-house inside Tynecastle, is, according to Kent, a barometer of where the Jambos are since new head coach, Derek McInnes, took over.
The former Arsenal Academy player said: 'It's a fresh start, a fresh season, and we are trying to build off the pre-season we have had, the positivity around the place, and are looking to putting that into the first game.
'Monday should be good, I'm excited and all the boys are as well. We aim to get off to a positive start.'
Kent said there had been a massive change in the squad which is now a big group, but the players have spent a lot of time together, including a week of warm-weather training in Spain which helped the players bond.
The 29-year-old added: 'We have good characters and good attitudes in the group and they have mixed with what we already had here, which was a quality group. Everybody has gelled quite well.'
The squad is the biggest he has been involved with and that breeds competition for places. He added: 'Training, since we got back, has been very high intensity, everybody trying to impress and prove themselves and be in the squad and be a valued member of the squad.
'It is exciting to see and you need that re-fresh at times. It is nice as players to have that motivation.'
Kent had more of what he called a 'back seat' last season because of injury, but he added that the squad felt they were capable of making the top six but did not meet the standards required.
He stressed: 'We want to put that right and we are excited to do that.'
Frankie Kent
Like this:
Like
Related

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South Wales Guardian
4 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Hearts back up Tony Bloom's bullish talk with opening win over Aberdeen
The Brighton owner, who recently completed a deal to invest in the Edinburgh club, had inadvertently cranked up the pressure on Derek McInnes' side with a string of bold declarations in the 24 hours leading up to their league opener, including stating that he felt they could crack the traditional Old Firm stranglehold in Scotland by finishing in the top two this term. Bloom, who had his name sung by Hearts supporters lapping up his ambitious intentions for their club as he watched on from the main stand, avoided any early egg on his face as the Jambos dug out a deserved victory to move top of the fledgling Premiership table on goal difference. McInnes' men seized the initiative through an early own goal by Dons captain Graeme Shinnie and then overcame a rocky spell after the break to seal their win with a header from Stuart Findlay. McInnes, taking charge of his first league game 11 weeks after being headhunted from Kilmarnock, named summer signings Christian Borchgrevink, Findlay, Oisin McEntee and Claudio Braga in his starting line-up. Tomas Magnusson was on the bench after his transfer from Valur was completed hours before kick-off, and the Icelandic midfielder came on in added time. The Dons, in their first competitive match since winning the Scottish Cup in May, included debutant trio Adil Aouchiche, Kusini Yengi and Nicolas Milanovic in their starting XI. With conditions relatively calm following concerns earlier in the day that the game might fall victim to Storm Floris, Hearts started strongly and made the breakthrough in the 11th minute when Harry Milne's low delivery from the left was turned into the net by the unfortunate Shinnie on his 34th birthday after Dimitar Mitov had made an excellent save to deny McEntee. The hosts had the wind in their sails and almost doubled their lead when Milne smashed a ferocious strike off the bar from the angle of the box. The Dons' only clear chance of the first half came in the 16th minute when Yengi knocked a close-range effort against the post. Hearts captain Lawrence Shankland had a stunning strike ruled out just before the break after team-mates Frankie Kent and Craig Halkett drifted offside in the build-up. Aberdeen started the second half with renewed purpose and Yengi spurned a golden opportunity in the 50th minute before Milanovic saw an effort saved by Zander Clark. McInnes, wary of the Dons' growing threat, made a quadruple substitution and switched from 3-5-2 to 4-4-2 in 70th minute. The move seemed to work as the Jambos doubled their advantage within three minutes when Findlay arrived at the back post to nod home from close range after Dons defender Mats Knoester was unable to deal with Milne's inswinging free-kick from the right.


South Wales Guardian
4 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Russell Martin's post-Motherwell Rangers criticism came from ‘love and care'
The Gers boss hit out following the William Hill Premiership opener at Fir Park, questioning mentality, speaking about 'egos' and accusing some of 'self-preservation'. Martin was speaking again at the club's training ground ahead of the first leg of the Champions League third qualifier against Czech side Viktoria Plzen at Ibrox on Tuesday night, where a play-off tie against Austrian outfit Salzburg or Club Brugge of Belgium awaits the winners. 'I think if they know us by now as a group of coaches that it all comes from a place of love and care for them,' said the Gers boss, who replied 'hopefully he will be in it, we will wait and see', when asked if new signing Oliver Antman, the Finland winger who joined from Go Ahead Eagles on Monday, will be included in the squad. 'We are here, myself, Gilly (Matt Gill, assistant), the coaches, ultimately for the players. 🎙️ Russell Martin spoke to the media ahead of Tuesday's match against Viktoria Plzeň. — Rangers Football Club (@RangersFC) August 4, 2025 'We're here to win football matches, but as coaches day to day, we are here to help the players. 'That's our job, to help them win, to help them develop, to help them improve and understand why, to help them enjoy playing for a club like this, because I don't think too many of them have enjoyed it enough to play for this amazing football club, because it's not always easy. 'I don't come out and say that because I want to be ruthless and all that stuff. 'If they know me as a person, the people who do know me, they know it comes from a place of love and to help them and to want them to be better. 'So I think when it comes from that place, whatever is said and if they understand that, then we'll always have a really honest and good conversation about it. 'I hope they understand who we are by now and what we're here to do, and I really believe they're really trying. 'So they're good people, but the default to try and protect yourself when it gets tough, we need to just shed that a little bit.' ✍️ We are today delighted to announce the signing of Finnish international Oliver Antman on a four-year-deal. — Rangers Football Club (@RangersFC) August 4, 2025 Martin confirmed that Thelo Aasgaard and Hamza Igamane will again miss out through fitness issues while it is not clear if Mikey Moore, the 17-year-old attacker who has signed on loan from Tottenham, will receive international clearance in time to be part of the squad. On the task facing his side, Martin said: 'The game is going to be tough. 'They are really powerful, really strong, play forward quickly, run forward quickly. 'It's a really different test to the Panathinaikos one and it is a really interesting and exciting one for us. 'They have strength in certain areas, but we have to try and turn the game, especially at Ibrox, into the game that we want, move the ball quickly, better than we did the other day. 'We have to really be up for the fight against these guys but I am looking forward to it.'


South Wales Guardian
4 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Derek McInnes hopes Tony Bloom enjoyed Hearts' win over Aberdeen
The Brighton owner was at Tynecastle for the first time after recently completing a deal to invest in the Edinburgh club, and he had his name sung by supporters lapping up his bold pre-match declarations that Hearts can win the Scottish title and break into the Champions League. After an early own goal from Dons skipper Graeme Shinnie and a 73rd-minute header from Stuart Findlay sent Hearts top of the fledgling league table, manager McInnes said of Bloom's attendance at the match: 'He'll have loved getting his name sung. I haven't spoken to him yet, I'm meeting him tomorrow. 'We've had a couple of text conversations. I think he would have been encouraged as well, seeing Tynecastle the way it was. I think he would have enjoyed it. He certainly would have enjoyed the result because, as he's said, he just wants to see a winning Hearts team more often than not. That's what we're all wanting.' McInnes smiled wryly when asked about Bloom's bullish comments in the 24 hours leading up to the match, but he said: 'I knew what Tony was going to say, I heard what you guys heard, absolutely no problem with it at all. 'There's so many people, including Tony, who are ambitious and want Hearts to be successful at the club. He's obviously come in with a fresh pair of eyes and came out and shot for exactly what he wants. 'We're trying to make progress and I think we can make progress. Where Tony and others and myself think we can bridge the gap and maybe try and get ahead of others is the confidence they have in the recruitment.' McInnes felt he had 'a team screaming to win the game of football there, absolutely busting'. 'For sheer commitment, guts, effort, I thought we were 10 out of 10,' he said. Aberdeen boss Jimmy Thelin conceded the better team won. 'We had an idea of how we were going to take on the game today in the first half with the ball, and we didn't succeed in that,' he said. 'Hearts put good pressure on us, and then they win these second balls and create a momentum with the crosses. They were better in the first half. 'I think in the second half we got better with the ball and started creating some chances in their box, but we were not really clinical. We were not really there.'