NEIL LENNON, the Hibernian head coach, has revealed the club have rejected a six-figure bid from Turkish outfit Elazigspor for striker Simon Murray.

The 25-year-old only joined Hibs last summer following a fine season with Dundee United and has impressed at Easter Road, scoring 14 goals in 25 appearances.

Murray’s showings have caught the eye of second-tier Elazigspor, who are keen to snap up the marksman in a bid to boost their hopes of winning promotion to the top-flight in Turkey.

“We had an offer from Turkey for Simon Murray but we have not accepted that,” said Lennon.

“As it stands, we’ll be keeping Simon unless another bid comes in that makes us think.

“I think the offer is testament to how well he has done and I’ve told him that he should take it as a real compliment. It should give him a real shot in the arm.

“I think he is ahead of expectations, after the first half of the season, so it’s excellent for him. We don’t want him to go.

“We are in a strong position, we have added to the squad - we think we’ve improved it - and we are in a healthy position off the field. It’s stress-free at the minute, but that can always change!”

There have, however, been no concrete offers for Hibs’ prize asset John McGinn.

He only has another 18 months to run on his deal and chief executive Leeann Dempster recently conceded that they are braced for interest in January.

Lennon is equally realistic, but calm, about what the transfer window could bring after adding Jamie Maclaren and Scott Bain to his ranks already.

“I don’t know how it will pan out with John, honestly,” confessed Lennon. “We want to keep him but I’d be surprised if there wasn’t something in the air for him as the weeks go on.

“We are prepared for any eventuality - and you need to be in January, it can really wind you up a bit. We have the structure in place to handle whatever happens.”

New signing MacLaren, an Australian, is hardly walking into a complete mystery.

“I’m really familiar with Edinburgh,” he said “My dad used to be a youth player at Hearts and would have played at Tynecastle as a junior. He was also a schoolboy internationalist for Scotland - he’s got that shirt framed at home.

“He always throws all the names about of the guys he used to play with, guys like [Bobby] Prentice and Walter Kidd.

He left Scotland when he was 19 to go over to America and returned to play for Dunfermline before going to Australia, playing more than 200 games. It’s a bit like home and I’m sure my dad will fly across when he can.”