Celtic
Celtic shut down talk of ‘constant crisis mode’ ahead of Rangers clash as Brendan Rodgers makes media claim
Celtic shut down talk of ‘constant crisis mode’ ahead of Rangers clash as Brendan Rodgers makes media claim
Celtic boss is convinced his team are going to get better
If his Celtic team should come up short in their hosting of Rangers this weekend then Brendan Rodgers will require a bucket of ice to treat his burning ears.
The Northern Irishman, though, would dispute this potential scenario is owed to flames long having been licking at the club through the concession of ten points while his Ibrox counterpart Philippe Clement’s side have been near faultless in the Premiership over the Belgian’s ten-week tenure.
The six points thrown away in consecutive games across early December did not just result in the club’s first back-to-back top flight defeats for a decade. These reverses now leave Celtic bidding to avoid three league losses in any calendar month since 1994.
Second-placed Rangers trail Celtic by just five points with two games in hand, yet Rodgers’ maintains recent setbacks that have led to his team relinquishing their advantage in the title race have created a false impression of the situation Celtic find themselves in – or the onus on them to make a statement in Saturday’s derby, as they did in winning the pair’s season-opening confrontation at Ibrox in September.
Brendan Rodgers insists Celtic remain in a “good place” despite recent losses that have allowed Rangers to close in on them at the top of the table. (Photo by Craig Williamson / SNS Group)
“I think if you read or listen to everything in the media you would feel we were in constant crisis mode here.
That’s what I feel. But I don’t think that way at all,” said Rodgers, who sought to extend a sense of poise to the injury loss of integral central defender Cameron Carter-Vickers in burnishing Stephen Welsh’s credentials to deputise for the US international.
“It’s another great game for us. I think going into that last game we were off the back of not a really good result. We had performed well against St Johnstone but didn’t get the result.
This time we are going in with a good feeling [following the wins over Livingston and Dundee].
“I think the big games always give you the chance to impose yourself. We have been a little bit inconsistent.
When we have been good, we have been good in games. But we need to find that consistency. It’s just levels, isn’t it?
I think it’s just levels. But for me there is no difference. I just think it’s maybe how it gets reported and how it is out there. For me we are still in a good place as a team. We are going to get better.
We will hopefully improve the squad. We’ll see where we get to at the end of the season.
“These games speak for themselves. We can go in and perform to a really high level and that will give us a chance to get the result.
Not really, no [could it be seen as defining]. Especially when you get another couple of games to play.
We have already won at Ibrox so whatever the result is tomorrow, and we want to win the game, there are still many more games to play. Our focus is to go and play the football that we want to, and see where it takes us.”
Rodgers says he won’t be much calmer going into his 15th iteration of the fixture he has suffered only one loss in, and that will pit him against a sixth different Rangers coach than for the first of his opening spell seven years ago. The “excitement” is “always there” for a confrontation he rates above experiences of Liverpool facing Manchester United and Everton for uniqueness. “You never get tired of it,” he said. “That’s for sure”.
AND ALSO
Curious Philippe Clement ready as he ever will be for Celtic-Rangers debut as he laughs off snow cannon accusation
Belgian is all set for his first-ever Old Firm experience after inspiring turnaround in fortunes at Ibrox
It has taken Philippe Clement almost fifty years to experience his first Old Firm derby, so the wait since taking over the reins at Ibrox hasn’t been a concern.
Indeed, it might be viewed as a blessing since the 16 matches he has taken charge of to date have allowed him to reshape and reset a previously struggling team.
Whatever their injuries worries – and they are abundant – they will still face Celtic in better fettle than might have been the case had this fixture fallen earlier in Clement’s reign.
Although clearly a significant clash, such has been the extent of Rangers’ turnaround in fortunes that a victory at Parkhead in this festive meeting isn’t as non-negotiable as it once seemed. Since Clement’s October arrival, Rangers have won more points (28) and conceded fewer goals (3) than any other Premiership side, winning nine of their ten league games under the Belgian.
Rangers manager Philippe Clement has yet to taste defeat since taking over in October.
Even if Rangers were to lose, their title hopes will still be in their own hands. They have played two fewer games than Celtic, with the recent postponement of the Ross County match robbing them of the chance to manoeuvre themselves into a position where they could go top with a victory over their rivals.
They still have two league fixtures left against Celtic after Saturday, the first of which, in April, falls after Clement has hit 50. The manager knows there are many milestone moments ahead. “This is our next step in this marathon of 38 games in the league,” he said.
Clement stressed that not playing in midweek was a “negative”, despite what some people claimed.
He says he was aware of some social media memes, one of which was a doctored image of a ‘tooled-up’ Clement ensuring that the A9 remained impassable ahead of the match.
“I have seen also some funny pictures that I had a snow cannon and things like that!” he smiled.
“I don’t have! It was funny. No, we were all disappointed. We were on the bus on the way to the hotel and everybody was really focused and wanted to play.”
What it has done is given injured players such as Connor Goldson, who was taken off towards the end of last weekend’s win over Motherwell, and John Lundstram, who was replaced at half-time of the previous game against St Johnstone, more time to heal. Both would have missed the Ross County match had it taken place.
They trained on Friday and are in contention to feature. It does, however, look to be too soon for Borna Barisic, which is a big blow for the visitors, particularly if Liel Abada makes his Celtic return. The left back has missed the last two outings and did not train.
Many more will be missing from the Rangers ranks – several thousand fans, or at least several hundred which is the number the away section had been whittled down to before the recent complete ban at both grounds for this fixture.
It remains a regrettable development, with memories of the lively scenes when Lawrence Shankland scored a late winner for Hearts against Hibs in midweek still fresh. The presence of visiting supporters is “good for football” acknowledged Clement although he stressed the Rangers fans will be present “in their hearts”. Otherwise, it isn’t very different from the partisan environment Rangers faced against Real Betis earlier this month.
Saturday will be Clement’s first taste of an Old Firm clash.
“I don’t see a difference for my players because we have been to Seville and they were also not all behind us and there were also a lot of people,” he said. “Of course, we had some fans there but the players go to play games and win games because they are ambitious. You have seen in the last couple of weeks an ambitious team in all the different circumstances.
That is our only concern, not how many people are there or what they think about us. We know already what they think about us from before. So that is not important. What is important is what we do on the field.”
It has taken Clement 16 matches to get here. Predecessor Michael Beale faced Celtic in only his fifth outing, while Giovanni van Bronckhorst had a run of 14 games before Rangers came a cropper at Parkhead, losing 3-0. Both men had already experienced Old Firm fixtures of course. Clement described himself as “curious” before his first-ever taste.
“When I was with the national team, Thomas Buffel was there and he played with Rangers and Joos Valgaeren was with Celtic,” he explained.
“They talked about these games and they had fun also and some quite good duels together also. It is a game with a lot of history. It is a big game and a lot of people are watching it, so that is nice for supporters, entertainment, all these things. But my love for my job is to enjoy moments with my players and with my staff and with my fans. They will not be in the stadium, but I am sure a lot of people will watch the game outside of the stadium. If we win there will be also a lot of joy in one part of Glasgow. I am doing my job for those things. I am not more excited to know that there are much more people watching the game on television. Maybe I am too old for that.”
He has not had the chance to attend the fixture due to his almost constant football responsibilities. “I started in the first team when I was 17 and have never stopped working,” he said. “Until 37, I played. Then I started directly to be Under-21 coach and coach of the defenders in Brugge, so it was a double job. I never in my life had time to do those things, to go to a game in the Premier League, or Real Madrid or Barcelona – those things you want to see one time. I had luck to do it as a coach and a player, but never as a fan. Maybe it’s something for the future – but not too fast.”
Rangers injury tracker for Celtic with Goldson and Lundstram timeline named as Philippe Clement ‘avoids’ one thing
The Ibrox boss won’t take any chances on derby day as his side travel to Celtic Park.
Connor Goldson and John Lundstram are poised to be pitched into the Old Firm frenzy after coming through Rangers final training session ahead of their trip to Parkhead at lunchtime.
And while Gers boss Philippe Clement refused to confirm they would both start – insisting he’d wait to see if there was an reaction to being put their paces – the availability of the experienced defender and midfielder would be a massive boost as his team faces the prospect of taking on the league leaders and 60,000 of their fans with no backing of their own.
Clement said: “Connor trained, so we will assess tomorrow what to do with that. He did train. I will make my decisions tomorrow after watching back the training and after speaking with the doc and the medical staff.
“Lunny trained, so we will see. I don’t want to say now that ‘yes, there’s a chance’ and then tomorrow he’s not in the selection – and people will say he was playing games. That I want to avoid. I don’t like to play games and to say that somebody is in and then this afternoon he feels a reaction from the training and we are not going to make a stupid risk and lose players for the rest of the season. It is better to make this assessment tomorrow and then it is clear.”
It is equally clear that Clement, unbeaten in 16 games as Rangers boss, believes his team can handle the heat that will be generated at Celtic Park. He added: “I don’t see a difference for my players because we have been to Seville and they were also not all behind us and there were also a lot of people.
“Of course, we had some fans there but the players go to play games and win games because they are ambitious. You have seen in the last couple of weeks an ambitious team in all the different circumstances.
“That is our only concern, not how many people are there or what they (Celtic fans) think about us. We know already what they think about us from before. So that is not important. What is important is what we do on the field.”
Clement has been doing his homework on Celtic and while acknowledging their attacking threat, insists he is treating the match like any other fixture. He said: “I have seen all their games until now because they are our biggest rivals this season. So I always watch these games. It is interesting to see them, to know them really well. We have really good analysts also so I have good information.
“The players also know them so well. It is about doing the right things against them to stop their qualities, and they have a lot of offensive qualities, and to look where the holes can be so that we can be dangerous in our way of football and find the right spaces. What we do every game, whether it is against Celtic or Aberdeen or Ross County, that way of working will stay the same.”
ALSO
Curious Philippe Clement ready as he ever will be for Celtic-Rangers debut as he laughs off snow cannon accusation
Belgian is all set for his first-ever Old Firm experience after inspiring turnaround in fortunes at Ibrox
It has taken Philippe Clement almost fifty years to experience his first Old Firm derby, so the wait since taking over the reins at Ibrox hasn’t been a concern.
Indeed, it might be viewed as a blessing since the 16 matches he has taken charge of to date have allowed him to reshape and reset a previously struggling team.
Whatever their injuries worries – and they are abundant – they will still face Celtic in better fettle than might have been the case had this fixture fallen earlier in Clement’s reign.
Although clearly a significant clash, such has been the extent of Rangers’ turnaround in fortunes that a victory at Parkhead in this festive meeting isn’t as non-negotiable as it once seemed. Since Clement’s October arrival, Rangers have won more points (28) and conceded fewer goals (3) than any other Premiership side, winning nine of their ten league games under the Belgian.
Rangers manager Philippe Clement has yet to taste defeat since taking over in October.
Even if Rangers were to lose, their title hopes will still be in their own hands. They have played two fewer games than Celtic, with the recent postponement of the Ross County match robbing them of the chance to manoeuvre themselves into a position where they could go top with a victory over their rivals.
They still have two league fixtures left against Celtic after Saturday, the first of which, in April, falls after Clement has hit 50. The manager knows there are many milestone moments ahead. “This is our next step in this marathon of 38 games in the league,” he said.
Clement stressed that not playing in midweek was a “negative”, despite what some people claimed.
He says he was aware of some social media memes, one of which was a doctored image of a ‘tooled-up’ Clement ensuring that the A9 remained impassable ahead of the match.
“I have seen also some funny pictures that I had a snow cannon and things like that!” he smiled.
“I don’t have! It was funny. No, we were all disappointed. We were on the bus on the way to the hotel and everybody was really focused and wanted to play.”
What it has done is given injured players such as Connor Goldson, who was taken off towards the end of last weekend’s win over Motherwell, and John Lundstram, who was replaced at half-time of the previous game against St Johnstone, more time to heal. Both would have missed the Ross County match had it taken place.
They trained on Friday and are in contention to feature. It does, however, look to be too soon for Borna Barisic, which is a big blow for the visitors, particularly if Liel Abada makes his Celtic return. The left back has missed the last two outings and did not train.
Many more will be missing from the Rangers ranks – several thousand fans, or at least several hundred which is the number the away section had been whittled down to before the recent complete ban at both grounds for this fixture.
It remains a regrettable development, with memories of the lively scenes when Lawrence Shankland scored a late winner for Hearts against Hibs in midweek still fresh. The presence of visiting supporters is “good for football” acknowledged Clement although he stressed the Rangers fans will be present “in their hearts”. Otherwise, it isn’t very different from the partisan environment Rangers faced against Real Betis earlier this month.
Saturday will be Clement’s first taste of an Old Firm clash.
“I don’t see a difference for my players because we have been to Seville and they were also not all behind us and there were also a lot of people,” he said. “Of course, we had some fans there but the players go to play games and win games because they are ambitious. You have seen in the last couple of weeks an ambitious team in all the different circumstances.
That is our only concern, not how many people are there or what they think about us. We know already what they think about us from before. So that is not important. What is important is what we do on the field.”
It has taken Clement 16 matches to get here. Predecessor Michael Beale faced Celtic in only his fifth outing, while Giovanni van Bronckhorst had a run of 14 games before Rangers came a cropper at Parkhead, losing 3-0. Both men had already experienced Old Firm fixtures of course. Clement described himself as “curious” before his first-ever taste.
“When I was with the national team, Thomas Buffel was there and he played with Rangers and Joos Valgaeren was with Celtic,” he explained.
“They talked about these games and they had fun also and some quite good duels together also. It is a game with a lot of history. It is a big game and a lot of people are watching it, so that is nice for supporters, entertainment, all these things. But my love for my job is to enjoy moments with my players and with my staff and with my fans. They will not be in the stadium, but I am sure a lot of people will watch the game outside of the stadium. If we win there will be also a lot of joy in one part of Glasgow. I am doing my job for those things. I am not more excited to know that there are much more people watching the game on television. Maybe I am too old for that.”
He has not had the chance to attend the fixture due to his almost constant football responsibilities. “I started in the first team when I was 17 and have never stopped working,” he said. “Until 37, I played. Then I started directly to be Under-21 coach and coach of the defenders in Brugge, so it was a double job. I never in my life had time to do those things, to go to a game in the Premier League, or Real Madrid or Barcelona – those things you want to see one time. I had luck to do it as a coach and a player, but never as a fan. Maybe it’s something for the future – but not too fast.”
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