Celtic
Brendan Rodgers’ Glasgow Derby Record Hailed By Pundit
Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers’ Glasgow derby record has been praised by pundit and former Hoops right-back Mark Wilson.
In 16 matches against Rangers, the current Parkhead gaffer has lost just once, back in 2018. Even at that, the sole game his team’s city rivals have beaten him was a narrow 1-0 scoreline in their favour.
Rodgers knows how to beat the Gers having done so 12 times. His win rate against them is a lofty 75%.
Wilson admitted on the morning after Sunday’s game that he’d rather be in the situation of his old club regarding the title race. He said: [Sky Sports] “I’d rather be in Celtic’s position at the minute knowing that Rangers have to come here and get a result, and seeing how those games have gone this season.”
The next league Glasgow derby is pivotal. At Parkhead, the Hoops have the slightest edge and the fact they have a manager leading the way who knows what he is doing is crucial.
Indeed, the pundit thinks that the boss has the edge over his opposite number. He said: “Brendan Rodgers has been an incredibly difficult manager to beat for Rangers managers and he’s had a fair few of them.
“Philippe Clement, Rangers supporters like him and think he’s the real deal and he looks the real deal. But he’s had two cracks at Rodgers and failed to beat him and yesterday was a big opportunity.”
“If it was me, I’d rather be sitting in Celtic’s position knowing I’ve got a home game against Rangers.”
With six league matches to go, the Bhoys know what they need to do to retain their title. They have to be impeccable over the coming weeks but with a fully fit squad that is beginning to click into gear, there is no reason to say they can’t.
Callum McGregor names one Celtic downside as skipper ranks Rangers display
Callum McGregor insists Celtic’s performance at Ibrox yesterday was as good as he’s seen during his long stay at the club.
The Hoops only ended up with a 3-3 draw but were completely dominant in the first half and went in at the break 2-0 up. Rangers were able to get back into it with an improved second period but the visitors were back in front in stoppage time before conceding again to a Rabbi Matondo cracker to make it 3-3.
Skipper McGregor was only able to make a late appearance off the bench after recovering from injury but not being deemed fit enough for the 90 minutes, replacing Reo Hatate who is also working his way back to prime condition. He was mightily impressed by how his teammates played in the first half though and reckons he hasn’t seen better at that venue.
But if he’s being critical, he admits they could have done with going 3-0 up to really hammer home the gulf at that moment in time.
He said: “The team performance was as good as I’ve seen here. In terms of performance, staying calm and showing composure, the football we played was outstanding. The only criticism is that we maybe don’t get the third goal to give us more comfort in the game.
“Second half we showed good personality to get through the sticky spells as well. We played with big energy and big ability and the only criticism that we have is that we didn’t go three or four up, even at half-time because we were so good in the game.
“The midfield were superb but the whole team was outstanding. We had the confidence to play through the pitch and we were a real threat at the top end as well.
“Sometimes you’ve got to see the bigger picture. It’s always a tough game when you come here and probably the disappointment will be that we’ve drawn after being so positive and being so good in the game.
“There is probably a bit of disappointment on the bus but we’ll dust ourselves down and look forward to the run-in. The positive is that the boys were so good. We played with big personality and quality and we’ve come out of here in a positive place.”
McGregor admits he would have been gutted to have missed out completely and revealed the decision to bench him was made on Friday.
The Hoops captain added: “It’s a big game when you come here. You want to be involved and help the group as much as you can. I never quite made it from the start but I wanted to be here and if I’d missed the game I’d have been devastated.
“Obviously those decisions lie with the manager. I spoke to him on Friday and he gave me the call. That was fine.
“It’s always about the team, it’s never about me personally and wanting to play in the game. It’s about what’s best for the team and trying to help the lads as much as I can.
“There’s not much room to breathe out there, is there? It’s good to be back.
“You know the game is going to turn at some point when you come here. They are a good side as well, they get the ball forward and once the crowd get involved in the game, it can be difficult.”
Alex’s Angle: Spare Me The ‘Fortress Ibrox’ Baloney
ONLY the churlish among us would deny Philippe Clement the praise he deserves for propelling a wayward team back on track.
The Belgian arrived in November with the Ibrox outfit displaying all the directional awareness of a blindfolded drunken sailor tasked with negotiating his way through a minefield.
They were clueless, guileless and aimless as they stumbled along under the leadership – I use the word in its loosest form – of the classless Michael Beale. The Londoner was jettisoned in the immediate aftermath of the home Premiership defeat from Aberdeen, the third loss in the league early in the campaign.
Kilmarnock had beaten them in the domestic season’s kick-off at Rugby Park on August 5 and Celtic dismissed them as also-rans just under a month later in the midst of the toxic atmosphere in Govan.
Brendan Rodgers is astute enough to realise his team did not have to perform on full throttle that afternoon. Their opponents went into the encounter on the back of a 5-1 Champions League play-off second leg thrashing from PSV Eindhoven in the Netherlands as they were catapulted out of Europe’s elite competition on a lopsided 7-3 aggregate score.
The Parkhead side did enough to get the derby over the line with a marevllous strike from Kyogo Furuhashi while Joe Hart, helpled ably by Liam Scales in front of him, proved to be unbeatable. Callum McGregor also played a captain’s part in the middle of the park.
The Ibrox club had been swept into the confrontation on the torrents of hot air and hullabaloo and suffered the consequences against fired-up opponents.
There was much to do for Clement when he arrived on these shores following his dismissal from AS Monaco in June, coincidentally around the time Rodgers was returning for his second stint in the east end of the city after he, too, had received his P45 after over four years at Leicester City.
ON ITS WAY…Kyogo Furuhashi’s first-time drive arrows in on its target for the only goal of the game at Ibrox on September 3.
The Belgian, unlike his brash predecessor, refused to adopt a scattergun approach with a blizzard of daft promises. Instead, he took the more studious undertaking of the challenges ahead and reminded everyone he did not possess “a little magic stick” a la Harry Potter.
On the back of three successive Belgian Pro-League titles – one with Genk and two with Brugge – he attracted the attention of AS Monaco. The last time I looked the Belgian top flight was rated eighth in the UEFA co-efficient while our own Premiership is ranked 16th.
So, without the assistance of “a little magic stick”, Clement has put his organisational skills to a good use in Govan. He has worked well with some of the dross that was brought to the club by Beale.
Credit where it is due. However, please spare me all the baloney and drivel we are now enduring about a return to the days of Fortress Ibrox, a citadel built on sand due to a fiscal sleight of hand that eventually caught up with the errant club and its owners.
Celtic players are supposed to be living in fear of stepping onto the pitch for tomorrow’s noon encounter.
ROARING SUCCESS…Brendan Rodgers yells in delight after another Celtic triumph.
I suppose the Aris Limassol team were similarly afflicted by such trepidation when they turned up for their Europa League clash and led 1-0 for most of the game before settling for a 1-1 draw?
Remember, please, this was after their 2-1 victory over their much-vaunted opponents at their 11,000-capacity Alphamega Stadium. Admittedly, though, Steven Davis was working as interim manager at the time.
Okay, how about Motherwell? Did they also overcome the jitters before their recent 2-1 triumph? And what about Benfica 23 days ago when they scuppered the travel plans of many onlookers with thoughts of descending on Dublin for the competition’s showpiece finale on May 22?
Brendan Rodgers, John Kennedy and the players will afford their city neighbours the respect they deserve as they square up for the third derby of the season.
However, I doubt very much if anyone in the away dressing room will be quivering in his boots at the prospect of performing at ‘Fortress Ibrox’.
Full strength potential for Celtic amid ‘boost’ pre-Rangers
Brendan Rodgers could well have a full-strength squad heading into Celtic’s crucial clash with Rangers on Sunday, according to a report.
The champions have been blighted with injuries to key players throughout the course of the season.
However, it seems that the vast majority of those are clearing up at exactly the right time as we enter the business end of the campaign.
Cameron Carter-Vickers and Reo Hatate stepped up their recovery at the weekend by starting against Livingston, a game that the Hoops ran out comfortable 3-0 winners.
It is hoped that Callum McGregor will recover in time from a calf knock to play some part in the weekend derby encounter.
In a potential further boost, the Scottish Sun claims Luis Palma could also be in contention.
It’s reported that the £4m winger is ahead of schedule with his rehabilitation from a muscle injury he suffered in training last month.
He’s scored nine goals for the Hoops this season, and it’s believed he’d expected to be back involved in first-team training ahead of the trip to Ibrox.
It’s stated that if Palma comes through unscathed then he will be included in Rodgers’ matchday squad, which is looking likely to be full strength.
Meanwhile, the news that away allocations will be restored to a reasonable level come the start of next season will come too late for Joe Hart to get a proper feel for what the Old Firm derby used to be, with his Celtic career coinciding with the ticketing tit-for-tat that is finally grinding towards a resolution.
Not that having only a small wedge of Ibrox backing his team – or, more recently, no fans at all – has diminished the experience for the former England number one, who is savouring these final months in a Celtic jersey before hanging up his gloves for good in the summer.
Ally McCoist says he & Rangers diehards will breach new hate crime law vs Celtic
Ally McCoist has slammed Scotland’s new hate crime law and claimed he and every Rangers fan will be at risk of breaching it against Celtic on Sunday.
The controversial bill has faced a barrage of criticism since it officially came into force on Monday, with JK Rowling and Elon Musk among the high-profile figures arguing that the legislation could harm free speech. The act creates a new offence of “threatening or abusive behaviour that is intended to stir up hatred” on the grounds of age, disability, religion, sexual orientation and transgender identity.
But McCoist – who will be working at Ibrox for this weekend’s Old Firm title clash – reckons the introduction of the new hate speech laws is “madness”.
He told talkSPORT: “We’ve got a hate bill. By the way, a hate bill has been passed in the country. And I can guarantee you, next Sunday at Ibrox, I, along with 48,000 will be committing a breach of that hate bill in the particular Rangers vs Celtic game we are all going to. It is madness.”
Gers icon McCoist reckons even senior police figures believe the act – passed by MSPs in 2021 – is unenforceable.
He said: “That’s exactly what the police think. The police spokesperson has come out and more and less said that. He obviously can’t because he’ll get himself in trouble.
“He has implied it, everybody with two brain cells in their head knows it’s madness, crazy. There is nobody in our country who thinks that is a good idea, who I have spoken to.”
John Kennedy says, “To be honest,” about how the Celtics’ locker room is feeling in advance of the Ibrox Glasgow Derby.
John Kennedy has shared how the Celtic dressing room is really feeling ahead of the big Ibrox Glasgow Derby game against Rangers next week.
Yesterday’s win over Livingston has placed Celtic back on top of the Scottish Premiership, albeit Rangers have a game in hand, but if Brendan Rodgers‘ side takes three points away from Ibrox then Celtic will be firmly in the driving seat ahead of the top six split.
With the full focus now on next Sunday, Celtic Assistant Manager, John Kennedy, has shared just how his players are feeling ahead of the trip to Rangers and how the team plans to prepare for the top-of-the-table clash.
Rangers have a tricky away trip at Dundee on the 10th of April and should they fail to win that then the title race will have taken another big twist if Celtic can pull off an Ibrox win as well.
Celtic the ‘calmest place’ in Scotland
The Hoops’ second in command has admitted that whilst his players remain focused on training, there is not a hint of nerves amongst the Celtic players yet.
Kennedy said [Scottish Football Podcast], “To be honest, and I’m not just saying this, but it’s probably the calmest place in Scotland inside our training ground.
“We know it’s about the sessions we do and the preparation we put in.
“And the reality is that we just have to take each day as it comes and make sure we prepare properly.
“We know when we are fully prepared and we are at like we have been the last little while then we know we are in good spirits and go and attack the game as we always do.
“But the reality is if you caught up in it too early in the week you allow the emotion to set in too early it’s also draining.
“So for us, it’s about keeping calm, just can control what we can control which is the training and when next weekend comes we will deal with that.”
Celtic have a number of their top players returning from injury. Yesterday saw Reo Hatate return for the first time since December since he was injured on international duty with Japan.
We also saw Cameron Carter-Vickers get a start as he builds up his fitness ahead of the Ibrox game and Matt O’Riley and Kyogo Furuhashi were also looking sharp in the 3-0 win over Livingston.
Yesterday’s victory sets the team up well for Sunday and hopefully, the confidence remains high amongst the players as Brendan Rodgers looks to pick up his second Ibrox win of the season.
At the ideal moment, Celtic unleashed Reo Hatate, and Brendan Rodgers unveiled his fast-track strategy for Rangers.
John Kennedy hailed rampaging Reo Hatate after his stunning return helped Celtic surge back to the top of the table.
The Parkhead assistant boss poured praise onto the Japanese ace who fired straight onto top form in spectacular style at Livingston. Hatate had a huge hand in the opening goal of the 3-0 success and displayed all his usual diligence and class despite starting a first game since last October.
The 26-year-old was smooth in his work at the Tony Macaroni Arena and Kennedy outlined the importance of the Asian’s impressive return. The assistant boss said: “He was on it right from the first minute and he has been in training, which is why the gaffer thought to get him in the team quickly. He’s been terrific the last few weeks. He came back in good condition and worked really hard. We had the game last week to give him some minutes and he was really good, so it was time to unleash him. I think you can see what he brings to the team.”
Hatate is a difference-maker for the champions as Kennedy continued: “I think that’s always the case with your best players. He’s shown that, in terms of big games and big performances. He’s obviously not fully up to speed, but I think we can see that he’s in pretty good condition and it’s just the confidence he brings to the team as well.
“He plays with that composure. Even on a difficult pitch, you can see how he brings a calmness to the game. He sees the passes which the front players thrive on and he gives us a slightly different dynamic.
“It’s important to have him back. It’s just about getting him through the week now, getting him that extra bit fitter going into next week. Even when he came off, Paulo [Bernardo] came on, gave us a bit of buzz and got his goal.”
Bernardo was netting his fourth goal of the season with his effort and Matt O’Riley made it a dozen for his campaign with a third. The Danish international was also in excellent form in West Lothian with Tomoki Iwata also playing his part in the success in the absence of skipper Callum McGregor.
Kennedy continued: “He’s been crucial for us this year, especially when Callum comes out, the dynamic changes slightly. Even Tomoki, in terms of the physicality he gave us, the number of times he picked up second balls or broke up attacks, he was really good and that allowed Matt and Reo to get involved further forward.
“It’s a good dynamic. We’ve got good options in there now, so that will be crucial in the run-in.”
Celtic were highly impressive against the league’s bottom team as they took control from the opening stages of the game. Rodgers’ squad looked in good form heading for the run-in and ahead of Sunday’s massive encounter against Rangers at Ibrox.
As well as having Hatate back in the fold for the win at Livi, skipper McGregor is also on course to make the top-of-the-table showdown. Rodgers’ squad has been beset by injury issues this term with a horst of key figures missing large periods of the campaign.
Stars such as Cameron Carter-Vickers have also been sidelined for spells, but the American also seems in rude health going into the final seven games of the Premiership race. Kennedy, who took on the main technical area duties with Rodgers serving a suspension and sitting in the stand at the Tony Macaroni Arena, admits it has not been simple to cope with the missing stars, but things are coming together now on the fitness front.
He said: “The squad is taking shape. Cam [Carter-Vickers] has another 90 minutes under his belt and with Reo back in we’ve pretty much got a full bill of health.
“We’re in good shape going into the run-in, but for us it’s just about focusing on performance and maintaining that level. It’s been a challenge but that’s part of football. It happens sometimes, and it’s affected our rhythm and our performances sometimes.
“But, in the last period we’ve been very good. We’ve given away one or two cheap goals which has kept other teams in games, but our attacking play has been really good. It’s been very good from our front players, the way we supply them and then the end product with us scoring a lot of goals.
“It’s just about staying on that. But even today, the defensive part of the game was very good. If you allow Livingston to get up into your half and get balls into your box, that’s when the trouble stops. But we stopped that at source, which was what Kyogo [Furuhashi], Daizen {Maeda] and Nick [Kuhn] did at the front end. Our midfield worked in and around that then the boys at the back dealt with anything that came along.
“That’s a really crucial part. Everyone thinks that when you come to Livingston it’s all about going and breaking them down. That’s very much part of it, but for us it’s just as important how we defend against that, how we press to stop them giving us difficult moments.
“At the same time, it forces mistakes and gives us chances, which we got a couple from in the first half as well. As a performance as a whole, it was really pleasing.”
Hugh Keevins: “It’s been a crazy Celtic season filled with unexpected events, but that’s just part of theme park life.”
What the SFA have done by handing Brendan Rodgers a suspended sentence for calling match officials “incompetent” is complete the construction of a theme park for conspiracy theorists.
The work was started by their co-architects, the SPFL, when they rearranged Rangers’ postponed game against Dundee for the Wednesday after the Old Firm derby next weekend. Celtic fans claimed that decision was based on bias and intended to keep Rangers’ players fresh for the Ibrox showdown.
Rangers fans now believe Celtic’s manager was shown leniency at his disciplinary hearing to ensure he’d be in the dugout opposite Philippe Clement for next weekend’s vital derby. The SFA went for compromise with Rodgers. Old Firm fans only understand conflict. Such as the row caused by appointing referee Don Robertson to take charge of Celtic’s game at Livingston this afternoon, three days after Rodgers was tried for suggesting the official was incompetent when Celtic lost at Tynecastle on March 3.
Some might say that’s pure coincidence. Most of the Celtic support will call it provocative. Now the only way the situation can be made even worse would be to appoint John Beaton to referee next Sunday’s game between the clubs. They couldn’t, could they? A toxic tone has been set for the remainder of a season in which the two main prizes, the league title and the Scottish Cup, will be decided by games between Celtic and Rangers.
It is an atmosphere that is unhealthy and unattractive but unavoidable at the same time. The SFA and the SPFL have pandered to the paranoid by their decision-making because Old Firm fans look at life with a suspicious mind and the resolute intention of trusting no one. At least it has brought them back to life. Celtic and Rangers supporters regard the interruption of the league season for international matches as a source of extreme irritation.
I know this from personal experience, having listened to so many radio callers express their disbelief that the title race could be halted for something as trivial and meaningless as games involving Scotland. So the SFA and the SPFL have resumed normal service by giving everyone an excuse to complain about everything and everybody.
Rodgers has, though, more to focus on at the ground with no name now that Tony Macaroni have ended their sponsorship deal with Livingston. Livi might be best described as a periodic pest to Celtic on the back of six drawn games between them, along with two defeats for the champions, in their Premiership history. Their manager David Martindale is, I’m told, in advanced discussions over turning his life-less-ordinary into a book.
It’s not as if he’s short on material, after all. But what kind of blockbuster might he be capable of providing today? Livi are, as I’ve told Martindale to his face, going down to the Championship and face an uncertain future because of external difficulties at the club that are outwith his control.
They could still inflict potentially fatal damage to Celtic’s title hopes if they put up a belligerent front today. And Celtic’s season has been characterised by the arrival of things they didn’t see coming, like points dropped at unusual times in unexpected places. They say opposites attract but do they distract as well? It’s a synthetic surface and not grass they’ll be playing on today. The ground will be full of Celtic supporters but there will be none at Ibrox next Sunday due to an ongoing case of mutual loathing.
And Rodgers’ team will be playing a team at the bottom, and not the top, of the league table. The only constants will be a lunch-time kick-off, live television coverage and the away fans’ inherent distrust of the match officials.
It never goes away. When Rodgers had his first ever league match in charge of Celtic, against Hearts at Tynecastle on August 7 2016, the referee awarded a highly controversial penalty to the home team. His name was John Beaton. Eight years later, the sour relationship between the referee and Celtic’s manager is still a headline-maker.
Such is life in the theme park.
Reo Hatate returns but probably as a substitute at Livingston
Reo Hatate is now fit and raring to go after many months on the sidelines. The Japanese playmaker has worked hard in training these past few weeks and is now back in the first team squad. That is welcome news with a trip to Ibrox looming next weekend.
Before that we have another difficult hurdle to overcome in the shape of Livingston tomorrow afternoon, but that’s a game that Reo might not be quite ready to start at this particular moment. Yes we could do with his creativity against a side who will look to suffocate us from the start. There is anti-football and then there’s David Martindale tactics and in the land of the Livingston giants we know what to expect in terms of a physical approach to the game from the relegation bound home side.
Reo would be target for the Livingston hard men from the start. They know he’s just back from injury and Martindale will instruct his players to test Reo’s frailty on their artificial surface, you can bet your life on that especially with us playing wee David’s favourite other team next Sunday.
The most sensible option would be to leave Reo on the bench and maybe bring him on if needed. We need him for next week more.
So that’s the three big calls for Brendan tomorrow. Callum McGregor sitting beside the gaffer in the stand, Reo Hatate on the bench and Cameron Carter-Vickers wearing the armband and on from the start. Will be interesting to see if Brendan thinks the same way.
Just an Ordinary Bhoy
“We are a family,” says Hart, listing the four actions necessary for the group to completely gel.
Everything Celtic goalkeeper Joe Hart said to the media, ahead of his side’s trip to Livingston on Sunday afternoon…
Two weeks off following the international break, how’s it been?
Yeah, it’s been good and used well. People got some good international minutes and some stayed back and got some good training in. We’re all ready to go, especially the guys who haven’t had internationals as a distraction. We’re looking forward to Sunday.
What are the aims for the three games before the split, what’s the message?
We’ve got to take it on like we have done all year. Keep everyone in as good a condition as we possibly can, and have as strong a squad to pick from. We’ll look to attack every game.
How’s the mood and atmosphere in the dressing room? How confident are the boys going into this final home run?
We’re in a good place. There’s always that kind of fresh feeling after an international break. You spend an awful amount of time with each other so it’s nice to have some time apart. There were a few stories to share and moments with good people and getting a few people back fit which means we’re in a good spot.
About the manager, he’s been suspended for one game. As an experienced pro, how much of a difference does it make when the manager is or isn’t on the touchline?
It’s the same with the players, you want your best players available, whether that’s your leader or the manager. Sometimes you have situations like this. We are more than capable and he’s had more than long enough to put his message across with what he needs and wants from us. They’re an incredible coaching staff that has been there for a long while now and that we all feel comfortable with. There’s no doubt we want Brendan (Rodgers) with us in the dugout, but the rules say that he’s not there. He’s going to do everything he possibly can to help us, and that’s no different.
Surely it’s a big boost that he will be available for that Rangers game, there was fear it was going to be a two-match ban.
Yeah, not for me to comment on speculation, and Rangers will take care of itself in however many days time. The most important game is Livingston. We won’t have Brendan in the dugout with us but John (Kennedy) will step in. He’s been personally with me my whole journey here, and he’s definitely got managerial skills from learning from great managers such as Brendan in the past and working with Ange Postecoglou. We look forward to seeing what he’s got.
You’ve mentioned getting a few players back. Does that give you a good feeling in the dressing room seeing these players?
Yeah, it’s a great feeling. There is no doubt we are at our best when we have everybody available and the manager has decisions to make on who he picks. In every single position, we are strong when people are fit and we are getting towards that point. That is an exciting place to be with such a potentially exciting end to the season.
You mentioned you spend so much time together that you need some time apart. Do these spells apart refresh you mentally?
Yes, of course. That’s life. We are a family. We are a team. We are a group of people who are working together, squabbling, fighting and looking to do what’s best for each other and what’s best for the team. For that relationship to flourish you need to have time apart sometimes – a refresh. Some people are in a good place and they need to calm down. Some people need to go and get minutes elsewhere. Some people just need some time away and it works. Football is really good like that and these international breaks for everyone at different stages in their career really do help.
Was this one especially crucial as we enter what everybody calls the business end of the season?
It is what is. The March window has always been there. Only COVID disrupted that. Whether it’s, good, bad or indifferent it is what it is. I think we have used it from all aspects as a positive.
You’ve been involved in title races and the latter stage of cup competitions. How do you deal with the pressure of that? Is there a different feeling going into every game when you get to this stage?
I think you just concentrate on what you can take care of and right now it has been training sessions and on Sunday we have a very important game and we are all looking forward to being involved in it. We have one more training session in which we are going to prepare and we’ve got all the bodies back through the door and we managed to train together practically as a full squad. We have got another chance to discuss Livingston and what we are going to implement in the game. On Sunday we have all that to focus on.
Stephen Welsh Explains How Joe Hart Preserves Unwavering Celtic Traditions
In a poignant moment for both players and fans, Celtic goalkeeper Joe Hart announced at the end of last month that he would be retiring from football come the end of the season.
Centre-half Stephen Welsh admitted how the Hoops’ dressing room was understandably gutted when such news surfaced.
Hart will be a significant loss for the Celts next season. Whoever takes the gloves from the veteran must be an elite ‘keeper, but it will be difficult to replace the veteran’s off-the-pitch values.
Given his experience in the game and what he has achieved throughout his lengthy and prestigious career, Hart’s experience and leadership are invaluable to Brendan Rodgers’ dressing room.
The gaffer has an arduous job on his hands replacing the former Man City stopper, and Welsh has revealed how Hart helps uphold the impeccable standards at the club. “He can get after us as well”, he told RecordSport.
“If we’re slacking off a wee bit, he’s the first person to get us up for it and he’s the first person to praise you for something, too. He’s been great for us.”
The 36-year-old’s spell in Glasgow has been decked in silverware. Hart won five trophies – including a treble – in his first two years with Celtic.
Going into the current campaign’s climax, the ex-England number one will want to go out on a high and end his playing career in the right manner.
Celtic injury latest after international break as key players close in on returns
As the international break comes to a close, Celtic will return to action in the Scottish Premiership this weekend. Brendan Rodgers and his side eagerly await a trip to Almondvale Stadium to take on Livingston.
The Hoops are currently top of the league table but just one point separates them and their rivals Rangers, so this, and their remaining fixtures are must-wins in their title charge.
Before Celtic prepare to take on Livi this Sunday, GlasgowWorld has taken a look at the latest injuries on the senior roster. We’ve listed the players currently on the sidelines with fitness issues and labelled them as ‘ruled out’ for the match, or doubtful based on the latest updates.
1. Out: Maik Nawrocki
The defender remains out after suffering another injury setback. Nawrocki is currently “receiving intensive treatment” on a hamstring injury with a return date yet to be specified
2. Out: Luis Palma
Palma did not leave on international duty and is expected to be out for one month after struggling with “muscle discomfort in his right leg”
3. Doubt: Callum McGregor
As he recovers from an Achilles injury, Rodgers said the club “have to assess that and see where he is at over the next 24 hours”
4. Doubt: Liam Scales
Like Hatate, reports claim the club are hoping to see Scales back in time to face Livingston after recently picking up a knock
5. Doubt: Reo Hatate
Hatate is back in training and has been “progressing well” according to Rodgers. Celtic are hoping that if all goes to plan, he will be able to feature on Sunday. But of course, nothing is set in stone until match-day
‘I’ve been told’: Mark Guidi shares a summer transfer update that will excite the Celtic fans
Celtic’s work in the transfer market has really frustrated the supporters over the past two seasons.
Don’t get me wrong, there have been huge success stories with the likes of Kyogo Furuhashi, Matt O’Riley, Daizen Maeda and Reo Hatate.
But for every one of those players, Celtic always seem to find an Oliver Abildgaard, Nat Phillips, Yosuke Ideguchi and Hyeokkyu Kwon.
And that’s because of the market Celtic shop in and their player trading model. Not spending over £3m for a player is great in some aspects and can pay off.
But as we have seen not just this season but also under Ange Postecoglou, the quality isn’t the same as spending £6m on a Cameron Carter-Vickers or Jota.
But all that is set to change this summer after what journalist, Mark Guidi, has been told.
Celtic set to spend this summer
Speaking last night on Go Radio, Guidi was commenting on Brendan Rodgers needing to replace Joe Hart in the summer and whilst he said there is still value at the lower end of the transfer market scale, the journalist said he’s heard that Celtic are about to move into the £6m-£7m player market this summer.
Guidi said [The Go Radio Football Show], “I’ve said many times. I said it last season, if Celtic can find a Jack Butland scenario or another Joe Hart scenario where it’s a free transfer or a £1m quid transfer fee and then a nice fat contract, then go for it.
“But see if you need to spend £6m-£7m then go and do it. And I’ve been told that Celtic are back in that market.
“The days of this £3m almost like a ceiling, has been wiped out. If players become available at £6m-£7m then Celtic are very much back in the market at that level.
“And that’s the way it should be, particularly for a goalkeeper.”
If this is accurate then the Celtic fans will be delighted. For too long we have watched project players come to the club and, more often than not, fail or get embarrassed in the Champions League.
To breed success, proper investment is required in the first team and it seems that the quality Rodgers has been craving all season long, could be about to be added in the summer. Let’s face it, Celtic have the money to do it.
Let’s hope it’s not to the detriment of this season as poor recruitment has already cost us the League Cup. It would be embarrassing if it cost us the league and Scottish Cup and Celtic are trophyless at the end of this campaign.
‘Difference-maker’: Gerry Creaney says Celtic have an ‘impressive’ player Rangers will be wary of at Ibrox
As the season draws to its exciting climax, the Celtic supporters will be looking forward to the return of the domestic after this international break.
Brendan Rodgers seems to have his team firing in almost all departments at this crucial stage of the title run-in with many of his Celtic players looking like they are getting back to their best after a season where some of our top guns looked really off the pace.
And it’s that return to form that Gerry Creaney believes that Rangers will be very wary of Celtic’s trip to Ibrox next month.
Creaney says Rangers will be ‘looking out’ for Kyogo
No one can deny that Kyogo has struggled to find that sparkling form that crowned him Celtic’s Player of the Season last year but now, Creaney believes that the Japan international could be the ‘difference-maker’ for the fight for the Scottish Premiership.
Creaney said [The Sunday Post print edition page 68], “He could be the difference-maker, but it might not just be through goals. He’s so impressive to watch.
“That turn of speed, that sharpness aligned to what he’s trying to achieve – score goals.
“He’s diminutive but strong. I believe he’s still got players around him with the ability to slip balls through that he’s quick and sharp enough to get on.
“You see different facets and traits coming out of people when they’re under a bit more pressure.
“That’s something, I’m sure, Celtic players will be more than able to stand up to.
“And with Kyogo, there’s no doubt Rangers will be looking out for him as the danger man.”
Kyogo has terrorised Rangers
The Celtic striker took a bit of time to find his groove against our Glasgow rivals but over the past two seasons, Kyogo has absolutely terrorised Rangers.
In eleven appearances against the Ibrox club, the 29-year-old has won six, drawn two and lost three whilst contributing seven goals. [Transfermarkt]
In his first season, Kyogo missed two derbies due to a hamstring injury but it was in the treble-winning season 2022/23 that the Celtic striker put the Ibrox club to the sword.
In the 2-2 New Year derby Kyogo scored a vital late equaliser to fortify Celtic’s position at the top of the league.
In the following clash at Celtic Park, the Bhoys ran out 3-2 victors with a Kyogo double proving crucial in a win that virtually wrapped up the title.
The Japanese also put Rangers to the sword in the League Cup final with another double as Ange Postecoglou successfully defended the first trophy he won as the Celtic manager.
And this season, Kyogo scored the winner in the 1-0 Ibrox win and the 2-1 victory at Celtic Park.
I would say Rangers are going to be a little bit more than wary of Kyogo. I believe they will be fearing him the closer the April derby comes.
Brian Dempsey to speak out on Fergus McCann’s Celtic takeover
Brian Dempsey has joined the cast list at The Celtic Exchange to share his views on the 30th anniversary of Fergus McCann’s takeover of Celtic.
Then in his forties, the Glasgow based property developer had been appointed to the Celtic board in 1990 but when it came to the AGM to ratify his appointment Michael Kelly and Chris White ensured that his place wasn’t confirmed.
As Celtic’s fortunes nose-dived on the park with debt creeping dangerously high others started to look at ways to replace the Kelly and White dynasty that had been in control of Celtic since the early days of the century.
The charismatic Dempsey formed an alliance with McCann, most of the media commentary came from Dempsey who stood on the steps of Celtic Park to declare that the rebels had won.
The alliance between the two men never survived very long, both have different versions of events with Dempsey fairly critical of some of the decisions taken by McCann as he forged a new business model with 51% of the club shares.
During international week the content from The Celtic Exchange has been priceless. A traditional documentary would only have skimmed the surface but with six, so far, hour long interviews most of the main characters have been able to share their stories, recollections and reflections leaving the viewer with a fuller picture of the most turbulent times in Celtic’s history.
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