
Hibs and Hearts meet for the fourth time this season on Sunday
Derbies are always a big deal. When the visitors are five games away from a possible first title in 66 years, the stakes are sky high.
Hearts sit top of the Scottish Premiership pile, above Celtic on goal difference after the defending champions' win on Saturday, and one clear of Rangers.
The leaders begin their post-split fixtures at Easter Road on Sunday, with Edinburgh rivals Hibernian looking for a third successive home win in this fixture.
Hearts have toiled on their travels of late, picking one solitary point from their past four games on the road.
Hibs are unbeaten in nine home league matches (W6 D3), with the Old Firm the only teams to have left EH7 with maximum points this term.
But is a short trip across town on the number one bus really an away day and what's that they say about the form book on occasions like this?
After all, Hearts had beaten Celtic and Rangers to go six points clear in the weeks before their late December trip to the outskirts of Leith when they found themselves 3-0 down after 48 minutes.
"It's going to take a performance like that again," said Hibs boss David Gray of that eventual 3-2 victory. "But I'm not going to say it's all about performance because it's all about winning. That's the most important thing at this stage.
"We take confidence from how we started the home game. We got the early goal and it was a real dominant display."
Hibs have had two weeks to stew over a meek 2-0 defeat in Aberdeen, while Hearts have been to Spain for a training camp since coming from behind to beat Motherwell 3-1 with a couple of late goals at Tynecastle.
"We're the first team other than Celtic or Rangers to be sitting top of the league going into the split," observed Hearts manager Derek McInnes. "We just want to try and enjoy it now and finish off the job.
"When you look at the fixtures, each one will be a different task but every one is a really tough game. Arguably, we could be getting the toughest game of the lot in the first one with all the dynamics of the derby, but it's a great game to be involved in.
"I think if you can get off to a good start in the split, it can give you that added momentum and confidence that anything's possible."
Murray and Taylor want Hearts title win - but what do other Hibs fans think?
- Published2 days ago
How are leaders Hearts handling title pressure?
- Published3 days ago
Hibs and Hearts have each been champions of Scotland four times.
Vera Lynn and Bing Crosby were in the charts when the green side of the city last lifted the title, while Elvis Pressley was the main man when those in maroon last did it.
So is it now or never for Hearts?
That might be a tad dramatic but both Celtic and Rangers shipping so many points across the same campaign is unusual. The Glasgow duo have hoovered up every title since Aberdeen were champions in 1984-85.
"We're still fighting, we're still believing, we're still swinging," added McInnes. "We still feel there's more wins in us and we feel as if we can get enough to then hopefully get our reward at the end of it."
Hibs hope to catch Motherwell in the race for fourth place but, on Sunday, most home fans will only have thoughts of scuppering their rivals.
"I'm not naive to the fact that the Hibs supporters would obviously prefer us to win this game and not see Hearts win the league," said Gray.
"But at the same time, we're trying to get European football. If we can get a positive result, it can really kick us on for the last four games."
Pick of the stats
Hibernian have won both of their past two home league games against Hearts; they had won just one of their previous nine home Edinburgh derbies in the Scottish Premiership before this (D4 L4).
After their 1-0 win in February, Hearts are looking to win back-to-back Scottish Premiership meetings with rivals Hibs for the first time since April 2014; this is the 28th top-flight game between the two sides since then.
Hibs remain unbeaten in nine home league games (W6 D3), keeping a clean sheet in their last three; they haven't recorded four successive home shutouts in the top flight since December 2009 under John Hughes.
Hearts are the first non-Old Firm club (Celtic/Rangers) to earn 70+ points in a Scottish Premiership season since Aberdeen in 2017-18 (73); it's Hearts' most in a top-flight campaign since 2005-06 (74).
Hearts are winless in their past four away league games (D1 L3), this after only failing to win four of their first 12 on the road in 2025-26 beforehand (W8 D2 L2).
Team news
Hibs defender Grant Hanley is suspended while Rudi Molotnikov, Josh Mulligan (both ankle) and Munashe Garananga (hamstring) are still out.
Hearts midfielder Marc Leonard returns from suspension and Harry Milne has a chance of being involved after three games out with a calf issue, but Oisin McEntee (hamstring) has joined Tomas Magnusson (thigh) in being ruled out for the season.
Calem Nieuwenhof (hamstring), Ageu (thigh) and Craig Gordon (shoulder) remain out.