Celtic 1 – 0 Aberdeen: Seven in a row….the treble-treble is a go!

It was tough, Probably tougher than expected and there were a few hairy moments but Celtic did what they always do in cup matches these days and won.

That’s a pretty incredible 22 straight victories in domestic cup competitions for Celtic now as a seventh domestic trophy was obtained.

Aberdeen were competitive, some would say excessively so as they got into Celtic’s face from the get-go.  We were happy to match them and in amongst all of that the occasional passage of football broke out. Tom Rogic cracked one off the outside of the post from distance with a low howitzer in the opening exchanges.

The first half was marred by a horrible injury to ex-Celtic winger Gary Mackay-Steven just after the half-hour mark when he was rendered unconscious by a clash of heads as a result of a head clash with Dedryk Boyata. The Belgium defender had to go off for stitches pitchside but it was horrible to see GMS lying motionless, face-down on the deck before his limp body was ill-advisedly pulled over by Aberdeen striker Sam Cosgrove who was obviously unaware as to the extent of the injury.

Related image
The players make it obvious how serious it is. 

I honestly feared the worst especially when you saw the replay and he really did take the full impact of big Dedryk’s head. Thankfully after several mins, he was stretchered off after apparently regaining consciousness. It probably would have been advisable for Boyata to have gone off as well but in a throwback to the 80’s he was simply bandaged up and thrown back on again with a new shirt.

Six minutes injury time was understandably added on and with only a minute of that left to go Ryan Christie – who spent last season on loan at the Dons – returned to haunt his old side as the man with the bandaged head Boyata played a long ball through the middle to Christie who broke into the box and fired a right foot shot at Joe Lewis before netting at the second attempt with his left foot when the ball rebounded to him.

The second half was more of the same until 52 mins as Celtic were awarded a controversial penalty when Dominic Ball headed down onto his hand just outside the box. It really was a gift and Scott Sinclair, usually pretty trustworthy from the spot, stepped up but it was a poor effort resulting in Joe Lewis touching it over the bar. Justice on this occasion was definitely served.

Boyata was finally substituted just after the hour mark and was replaced by Jozo Simunovic who we haven’t seen in quite some time.

Not long after we were almost wishing we hadn’t seen him for a lot longer as in an attempt to clear his lines he cracked the ball off his own post nearly delivering an unlikely equaliser to the men in red in the process.

Celtic had chances to kill the game as Sinclair broke free and raced through on Lewis only to fluff his lines and with us queuing up after a break late on late on Edouard choose to go it alone when he had multiple options he could have set-up instead.

For their part, Aberdeen stuck on multiple strikers and huffed and puffed a lot but ultimately became frustrated and instead of firing in attempts at our goal elected to increasingly throw the hammers instead.

Scott Brown was put on, on 64 mins to give them a taste of their own medicine and predictably they didn’t like it as he put in a few meaty challenges of his own and taunted the opposition players as they got increasingly reckless and desperate.

Image result for celtic 1-0 aberdeen
Aberdeen players look on after losing yet another cup final.

At fulltime Mikel Lustig also let the Aberdeen players and coaching staff know who’s boss which resulted in post-match complaints from Dons manager Derek McInnes and captain Graeme Shinnie with them claiming our players ‘lacked class’. Cleary they have forgotten about the antics from the final game of last season at Celtic Park by their very own Shaleum Logan who openly taunted the Celtic players and fans at the final whistle. Funny that.

Anyway, that’s seven trophies in a row for Celtic and Brendan Rodgers, as well as our 14th trophy in seven and a half seasons bringing our overall trophy hall to magnificent 106 and counting. We’ve also won four out of the last five League Cups. Strange to think when I was growing up we never won it for 15 years and it was regarded as ou ‘bogey tournament’. Not anymore.

Image result for celtic 1-0 aberdeen
Scott Brown claims his sixteenth winner’s medal.

Form-wise we are now unbeaten in eight matches in all competitions with seven wins and a draw and haven’t lost a domestic match since going down 2-1 at Rugby Park to Kilmarnock way back on Sunday 23rd September. We’ve won nine and drawn one since then.

The real standout stat though is our defensive record as we have conceded only one goal in our last eight matches in all comps and domestically none in our last six and only two in our last ten.

That really confirms how big an improvement Filipe Benokivc has brought to the side since his loan move and underlines why Leicester City parted with ÂŁ13 million for him this past summer. He oozes composure and class and just looks head and shoulders above any of our other central defensive options. Fingers crossed we can keep a hold of him until the end of the season.

Next up we return to league action in a mere 48hrs as we visit a Motherwell team who are in very indifferent form. Indeed only last weekend they thumped Aberdeen 3-0 at home only to go down meekly 2-0 away at Livingston on Saturday.

For our players, it’s been an exhausting period with our visit to Fir Park being our fourth game in only eleven days and not to mention the international break seeing most of our players also involved. James Forrest looked particularly out of sorts the other day as he had a raging battle with Dons fullback Maz Lowe and couldn’t really get anything going. Tom Rogic also failed to make much impact despite his early dazy cutter nearly opening the scoring. I suspect there will be changes on Wednesday with Simunovic,  Scott Brown, Ntcham and Leigh Griffiths all possibly coming in from the start.

Until then we have another piece of silverware in the bag and a mythical treble-treble really is a goer.

Those glory, glory days.

 

Europa League review: Rosenborg 0 -1 Celtic. Job done!

It wasn’t particularly exciting but Celtic got the job done with a pretty comfortable 1-0 win against a pretty sedate – or is that limited? – Rosenborg in Trondheim.

There were 800 travelling fans in Lerkendal Stadion last night and allegedly the best part of 13,000 + home supporters too according to the official attendance but the ground only holds 21,405 and looked about a third full to me so I think someone was being tricky with the figures.

The Rosenborg fans message last night.

Ultimately the Norwegians needed a miracle to go through and clearly had one eye on this coming Sunday’s national cup final where they have a chance for a rare domestic treble though despite some prematch predictions they actually fielded more or less their full strength team.

Celtic though dominated from the start and were all over the home team in the first half. Despite the constant peppering of the Rosenborg box chances were few and far between until keeper Andre Hansen saved from a Tom Rogic effort from the edge of the box that the Aussie should have done better with on 22 mins. Not long after James Forrest also broke through and tested Hansen with a left foot drive that was touched over the bar.

Forrest himself turned creator as Celtic finally opened the scoring as he crossed it delightfully to the back post from inside the box to the unmarked Scott Sinclair who had all evening to line-up his header and put it home with ease only minutes before halftime.

Image result for rosenborg 0-1 celtic
That’ll do it. 

The second half was not quite as comfortable but the hosts never actually registered a shot on goal – the same thing happened at Celtic Park the last time we played them – and though it was frustrating not seeing us turn our dominance into more goals, in the end, we cruised to a pretty easy three points and indeed our first win away in the Europa League in 20 attempts.

For Brendan Rodgers, it was only his fifth win in twenty away games and arguably his most important. Two of those away wins have also been in Trondheim so he’ll be wishing we could play them every season.

Image result for rosenborg 0-1 celtic
Congratulations lads.

Talking of stats this means that Rosenborg have one win from 23 Europea League matches and have failed to keep a clean sheet in their last 29 Europa League games, conceding 59 goals in the process. I thought we had it bad in Europe.

We should be beating Rosenborg and we did and it puts us on 9 points and second in the group behind Red Bull Salzburg going into the final match against that very team. The Austrians secured their place in the last 32 and kept up their incredible unbeaten run so far this season in all competitions with a 1-0 win at home over Leipzig. Many, including myself, had suspected a carve up when the Germans somehow started as favourites but it was a Norweigan ironically in Fredrik Gulbrandsen who did Celtic a favour as he scored the only goal in the final 15 minutes.

So all that means that in 13 days at Celtic Park we only need a point to progress though it’s almost impossible to set your stall out for a draw at home in Europe so expect Celtic to go for the win. As for Salzburg, it’ll be interesting to see how much this unbeaten run means to them as they may elect to rest players or decide to try and keep it intact.

Either way, it’ll be interesting and most likely heart stopping to boot.

Europa League preview: Rosenborg vs Celtic – It’s do or die……again!

On Thursday night Celtic will travel to Trondheim for the third time in nearly 16 months and the second time in less than four months to take on Norwegian Champions Rosenborg.

I’ve used this title before but it really is apt. It most definitely is ‘do or die’ as anything but a win on Thursday will see us relying on results elsewhere and no longer having our destiny in our own hands in regards to qualifying for the Europa League knockout stages and seeing European football post-Christmas.

There are various permutations to going through but I’ll look at those later on in the article. For now, I’m going to concentrate on our opposition.

As stated, in the beginning, we know them well. Almost too well. Indeed when I heard we’d been drawn with them in the group stages I was, to say the least, a little underwhelmed considering how many times we’ve played them recently. We do of course have a pretty good record against them having not lost one of our last five encounters with them which have seen us beat them three times and draw twice. One of those wins was also at their home ground in Trondheim when James Forrest smashed in a solitary winner against them in August of 2017. Overall we have a 5-1 lead in terms of goals as well with the two draws both ending goalless.

They have just wrapped up their fourth consecutive Norwegian title –  which is a record 26th overall – after completing the season with 19 wins from 30 games with seven draws and only four defeats.

Champions of Norway again. 

Since playing us last on the 20th of September they have played 10 domestic matches – eight in the league and two in the cup – and have lost only one which was a 1-0 defeat in the league to eventual runners-up Molde. They have however also drawn three games, have only scored 15 goals and have conceded seven in that time.

Their main goal scoring threats are veteran strike pair Alexander Søderlund and the mercurial Nicklas Bendtner. They have scored 24 goals between them this season though only four in Europe. Bendtner though hasn’t seen much football in recent weeks which is something he’ll have to get used to as he’s just been convicted of assaulting a taxi driver. He’s due to return to his native Denmark to serve a 50-day jail term at an as of yet undetermined date.  In recent months their veteran midfielder Mike Jensen and young Nigerian forward Samuel Adegbenro have stepped up to the plate with some important goals though neither are in double figures.

Image result for nicklas bendtner
Bad boy Nicky outside court.

In the Europa League groups stages this term, their record has been pretty woeful having lost all four matches thus far conceding 12 and scoring only three. Last time out they entrained Red Bull Salzburg and were ripped apart 5-2, scoring both of their goals when already down 4-0. This came on the back of a 3-0 hiding in Salzburg and to be honest their record in the Europa League group stages full stop pretty awful as they have only recorded three wins in their last 22 and haven’t played in Europe beyond Christmas this century.

All that being said we struggled to break them down in the home leg 10 weeks ago and it took a late Leigh Griffiths header to gain the victory. We also really struggled away against them in Trondheim back on August 1st in a stale 0-0 game where we only created one real chance.

But let’s also put our last two encounters against them into context. Backing August that was the second leg of a tie in which we were already 3-1 up from the home leg so it was natural that we would defend what we had and in the end we got the job done. The Norwegians were the better team on the night but they really didn’t create much and on reflection at least it was a nervy but ultimately pretty professional job.

In the September game, we still dominated and us struggling to break them down was a general issue at the time. Indeed the following weekend we lost 2-1 at Kilmarnock and as the talk of crisis loomed we began to get our arses into gear and subsequently have gone on a nine-game unbeaten domestic run with eight wins scoring 28 goals in the process and conceding only two. Europe has of course been a different story but after disappointing away performances to Salzburg and Leipzig we produced a stunning 2-1 win against the Germans on matchday four to keep our hopes of qualification well and truly alive.

The last time we went to Trondheim needing to win was in August 2017 during a Champions League qualifier. Having drawn the first leg 0-0 at home the pressure was all on us to produce and produce we did as we dominated the game with 63% possession of the ball. As mentioned earlier James Forrest scored on 69 minutes and not long after raced through on goal to score number two but fluffed his lines. It was one of the most comfortable nights I can remember Celtic having on the road against good opposition in Europe and we simply have to replicate it tomorrow evening.

Tom Rogic will be back and Filipe Benkovic will hopefully make a rare European away start for us also. We missed both badly the last time we ventured abroad and having them back in is a huge plus point.

Image result for filip benkovic
Benkovic needs to bring the power tomorrow night.

Interestingly both clubs have major cup finals on the Sunday following the match. For Celtic, it’s a chance to win seven consecutive major trophies in the League Cup final against Aberdeen whereas for Rosenborg it’s a chance to a secure a rare domestic treble as they go up against Strømsgodset– the team that Ronny Deila came from – in the Norwegian Football Cup final.

I wonder how much that will play into their thinking? Winger Pål André Helland is already in a buoyant mood comparing their title victory to a penis extension and manager Rini Coolen admitted that despite the upcoming tie against Celtic he allowed his players to go out and party after receiving the league trophy on Sunday.

Despite losing all four matches thus far in the group stages incredibly they still could technically make it to the last 32. They would need to beat us by two goals or more and then hope Leipzig succumbed to Salzburg before then going to Germany on matchday six requiring to beat their hosts by three goals or more whilst hoping that Salzburg defeated us. So it’s to say the very least a long shot and perhaps with that in mind players may be more focused on the big domestic cup match three days later. Some online Celtic sources seem to believe that they could even rest half of their usual starting eleven but what the actual basis for this claim outside of sheer conjecture is anyone’s guess.

Of course our own cup final is pretty important too but I’d say it’s trumped by staying in Europe beyond Christmas.

As for the rest of the permutations we basically need Salzburg to beat Leipzig which would see them qualify as group winners with a game to spare and if we beat Rosenborg we’d only require a point against the Austrians at home in the final group match to secure qualification.

A draw between the two Red Bull sides would also be pretty good news as we’d then face a likely depleted Salzburg side – owing to them having already won the group – in the final match requiring a win unless Leipzig somehow drew or lost against Rosenborg.

Defeat for us and Leipzig win then it’s over. A draw and Leipzig win and it’s as good as over. In fact, a draw for Leipzig and we lose and you’re still clutching at straws. So really we need to win and that’s all there is to it.

But here comes the back down to earth with a bump bit and it’s our away form in Europe. I know it sounds like a broken record pointing it out but it is awful. We haven’t won any of our last five which indeed includes trips to face Rosenborg as well as away to Suduva in the footballing hotbed that is Lithuania. We’ve also only won two of our last 11 away. I could extend the record even further back under Brendan and it shows only four wins in 19. Do you want to hear the goals for and against on the road in Europe too? Na. Me neither. Safe to say it’s eye-watering stuff.

There’s no doubt we struggle badly on the road but maybe on Brendan’s 20th sojourn to the continent we can get arguably his biggest win yet. And a hungover weakened Rosenborg team with one eye on their national cup final on Sunday would definitely help.

On a final note, I’ve just seen the odds for the Salzburg vs Leipzig game. The Austrians despite being group leaders with four wins out of four as well as being undefeated in all competitions this season which has seen them record 22 wins and four draws are somehow underdogs for a home tie against a team they beat 3-2 away in the group stage opener. RB Leipzig start as 4/5 favourites with the home team as 3/1 outsiders. Mmmmmm. That does seem a bit iffy. Is a possible carve up in the offing between two teams with almost identical names and badges? Surely not.

Anyway, we have our destiny in our own hands. Let’s hope we take it with both.

 

Weekend review: Celtic thump Accies whilst the league takes on a retro look.

Celtic continued their excellent recent form by putting Hamilton Accies to the sword in the early kick-off on Saturday.

A beautifully worked move from a corner on 13 mins saw McGregor play it short to Edouard who backheeled it back to him and McGregor passed into the path of Ryan Christie who stroked it home sublimely.

Chris Sutton said it was a school ground move that Accies should have seen coming. I’ll be honest I spent 12 years at school between primary and secondary and can’t ever remember ever seeing such a move executed during lunch or either breaks on the school pitches but maybe Chris’s school was different.

This all came after a wonderful one-handed save from defender Matt Kilgallon in the box during the opening exchanges that was made even better by Accies defender’s pretending it had hit his face immediately after. It all seemed pretty clear to me and everyone in the stadium and watching at home but referee Don Robertson was clearly taken in Kilgallon’s performance and waved play on.

There should have been more goals for the away team in the first half  and my second half viewing was interrupted by having to attend a school Christmas fair but I recorded it and watched upon my return at 3.30pm.

Incidentally, what is it with Christmas fares in November? Was it like that back in the ’80s and ’90s? I genuinely can’t remember. Seems a bit early but I guess that’s a topic for another day and indeed an entirely different kind of blog.

Anyway back to the football and it was plane sailing for the Bhoy in the second half as an innocuous Scott Sinclair header was backheeled into his own net by the hapless Scott Martin on 68 mins and then the returning Leigh Griffiths came on for his first appearance in seven weeks and drilled home a low struck freekick from the edge of the box on 82 mins.

Image result for hamilton accies 0-3 celtic
Celtic fan Scott Martin is about to love every fan’s dream. 

Ryan Christie nearly made it four before the end but his attempted neat finish was deflected onto the post for a corner late on and that’s all she wrote as Hamilton offered little in the opposite direction and Celtic cruised to an easy three points and retained their spot at the top of the league.

Only two points behind them are Rangers who overwhelmed Livingston 3-0 at Ibrox though the men from the Tony Macaroni Arena had their moments in the first half.

Elsewhere Hearts complete and utter capitulation of the last six weeks continued as they collapsed meekly 2-0 in Paisley against St.Mirren who recorded their first win under new manager Oran Kearney and Hibs also still can’t buy a win as they threw a 2-0 lead away to the bottom of the table Dundee in a 2-2 draw at Easter Road.

St.Johnstone and Kilmarnock are both almost neck and neck in the league sitting just behind Hearts and showed how close they are with a 0-0 draw at McDiarmid Park. The Saints are now unbeaten in six with five wins since we thumped 6-0 on their home patch back in early October and are only five points off the top which is pretty incredible. Killie meanwhile have only suffered one defeat in nine and sit one point above the Perth side as their equally incredible run of form under Steve Clark continues.

The big shock of the weekend though was Aberdeen – our opponents in next weekends League Cup final – getting battered 3-0 at Fir Park by Motherwell. The Dons had been on a four-match winning run which included wins over Rangers and at Kilmarnock and had only conceded one goal in that time. Motherwell meanwhile were coming off a 7-1 trouncing in their last league match against Rangers a fortnight ago.

Needless to say, we’ll start heavy favourites against the Dons next Sunday.

But between now and then there’s a pretty important match against Rosenborg in the Europa League that we must navigate and has to be our priority.

 

International round-up: Scotland 3 – 2 Israel. James Forrest Ballon d’OR.

James Forrest, sorry Scotland picked up from where he/they left off on Saturday night and captured a vital win that propels them into Group B of the Nations League as well as securing a play-off place – and at home none the less – for the Euros against Finland in March 2020.

Ex-Celtic Beram Kayal buried a wonder strike from about 25 yards that gave Allan McGregor no chance on the 9 mins mark. The keeper’s namesake Callum McGregor could have shut the Israel midfielder down earlier but there’s no way anyone could genuinely have expected that.

Image result for kayal israel scotland
Kayal isn’t messing around. 

The goal aside Israel dominated the opening stages and it looked like Scotland’s destruction of Albania three nights previous had perhaps been more down to the Eastern European sides ineptitude as opposed to a resurgence from the Scots.

However, the men in navy blue gradually got back into it with McGregor almost scoring with a fantastic drilled volley from distance that was well saved by Ariel Harush and had begun to pin the visitors inside their own box by the time James Forrest lashed home the equaliser not long after the half-hour mark.

From there on the hosts dominated and a wonderful passage of play saw Steven Fletcher nod onto Ryan Christie who raced down the left flank before lobbing over to that man Forrest again who took a steadying touch before side-footing home the second.

Going into the second half it felt like there was going to be only one winner and Forrest collected from Ryan Fraser in the box before a deft chip left Ben Harush on his arse and set him up to place it in for number three and his hattrick. Similar in execution to his second on Saturday though not quite as spectacular.

Simply put Forrest is on fire right now. So hot indeed you might be able to genuinely light a fag off him.

Image result for kayal israel scotland
They don’t like it up em’.

Of course, Scotland always has a tendency to push the self-destruct button and duly obliged as Eran Zahavi was given acres of space to steady himself and blast home a possible reprieve for the Israelis with a quarter of an hour left.

Much fingernail biting ensued and I thought it only right to put a fiver on Israel to draw as it was sitting at 12/1 – hey if we’re going to blow it then I may as well make a couple of quid – and it almost paid off with McGregor having to produce a fabulous reflex save in the dying embers but Scotland held out and secured three more precious points to top the group on nine.

For Alex McLeish, it was a reprieve. His hand was forced somewhat by injuries into playing a 4-5-1 with Forrest and Fraser on the wing, a recognised left-back playing in position and in-form players getting starts as opposed to the old ‘going for experience’ chestnut. That and James Forrest effectively saved his bacon.

Christie and Armstrong’s energies were boundless and Callum McGregor continues to look very comfortable in a holding role and considering this was a squad with players such as Mulgrew, Griffiths, McGinn, Naismith and Tierney absent it’s difficult not to get excited about possible future prospects. For a start, the football over the past two games has been unusually dynamic and free-scoring for a Scotland team.

The draw for the Euro 2020 qualifiers takes place a week on Sunday – December 2nd – in Dublin and Scotland now know they will be in Pot 3 and that if one of the two tops spots in the group is not secured then they have the play-off match with Finland to fall back on in 16 months time due to their Nations League success.

That’s a long time away and a lot of water can go under the bridge between now and then. But Scotland now have both something to build on and no matter what happens in the qualifiers something to look forward too and a genuine chance of a first major tournament qualification since 1998.

Scotland actually won something last night. It might not have been much but they won something. That doesn’t happen much. So you know, let’s enjoy it as it’s inevitable calamity and disappointment is coming in the post somewhere in the not too distant future.