Hibernian: Shaun Maloney sacked as manager after four months
- Published
Shaun Maloney has been sacked as Hibernian manager after only four months, with chairman Ron Gordon saying "ultimately, it didn't work out".
The 39-year-old former Scotland midfielder was appointed on 20 December after the dismissal of Jack Ross.
But his side missed out on a top-six finish in the Scottish Premiership and lost Saturday's Scottish Cup semi-final to city rivals Heart of Midlothian.
Former Hibs captain David Gray has been named caretaker manager.
Maloney was informed of his sacking when he arrived to take training on Tuesday morning, with the decision having been reached by the Hibs hierarchy on Monday.
Assistant Gary Caldwell and coaches Valerio Zuddas and Brian Doogan have also left the Edinburgh club.
"Our hope in appointing Shaun Maloney as a young, highly regarded coach was that he would help us take the club forward, but ultimately it didn't work out," Gordon announced on Hibs' website.
Maloney, who also played for Aston Villa, Wigan Athletic, Chicago Fire and Hull City, began his coaching career with first club Celtic before joining Belgium as Roberto Martinez's assistant in 2018.
He only won six of 19 games in charge of Hibs and his first managerial job comes to an end after successive defeats by Hearts in the Premiership - which consigned the Easter Road side to the bottom six - and cup.
While he begun his tenure with back-to-back victories, Maloney has led Hibs to just one win in 13 Premiership games in 2022. Australia winger Martin Boyle - who remains Hibs' top scorer this season - was sold in January for £3m to Saudi Arabian club Al-Faisaly.
Despite the weekend loss at Hampden, which proved to be his last game in charge, Maloney had appeared optimistic about making improvements next season.
"I know exactly what we need to get to a point where we can consistently out-perform teams above us," he said at the weekend. "That's going to be vital over the next few weeks.
"I think the last three or four months there have been signs of progress. There have been moments where it feels like that progress has stalled. This doesn't feel like that at all.
"This was by far the best performance I have had."
'Shaun deserved longer time to make changes' - analysis
Former Hibs captain Ian Murray
Was I overly surprised? Not really because, being in Edinburgh, you gauge the fans' reaction to the last couple of weeks, but it was a very short tenure that Shaun was given.
Obviously results weren't of the standard that Hibs expect or should be at, but I still believe that Shaun deserved longer in his job to put his ideas across. I only caught bits of Saturday's match, but Hibs played well and you could clearly see what Shaun wanted.
They have tried a different route this time to put a different dynamic into the club and it's not quite worked. We'll never know if it would work in the long-term - it certainly wasn't going in the right direction, results-wise, but in terms of signing and blooding young players, it was.