McInnes instructed his facet might need bought away with one when he was requested concerning the choice to disclaim St Mirren going right into a 3-1 lead in Paisley.
The VAR group deemed Mark O’Hara, who was in an offside place, interfered with play by blocking the trail of Lawrence Shankland when Hearts had been trying to defend a deep free-kick.
The transfer ended with Miguel Freckleton escaping Hearts’ excessive line and scoring what he felt was a 3rd St Mirren objective, however referee Matthew MacDermid agreed with the VAR when he reached the monitor.
That set-play was one in all many who triggered carnage within the Hearts field, one thing McInnes referred to post-match.
However the Hearts boss was equally as eager to reference the resilient mentality that ensured his facet left Paisley with a degree, extending their 10-game unbeaten begin.
“We’re dissatisfied with the objectives we lose,” McInnes added. “It is the primary time we have seemed vulnerable from set-plays.
“Typically St Mirren put that strain on you and also you make poor selections. However by and huge I believed we had been good within the sport.
“I liked the way in which the group had been on the finish. The assist keep there on the demise as a result of they really feel one other objective is coming.
“That is an incredible feeling to have as a supervisor, you’re feeling the gamers are doing the whole lot to get that profitable objective.”
