Celtic

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  1. Watch Old Firm goals before crucial derby showdownpublished at 10:20 BST 8 May

    Sunday marks Martin O'Neill's first Old Firm derby at Celtic Park since a 2-0 defeat to Rangers in February 2005.

    He can ill afford anything other than victory this time as Celtic, with just three games left and a three-point deficit, pursue long-time leaders Hearts, who visit Motherwell on Saturday night.

    Rangers travel across the city with their title hopes hanging by a thread after a damaging defeat at Tynecastle on Monday. Even if they can't take the crown themselves, the Ibrox side would revel in dealing a fatal blow to their fierce rivals' glory bid.

    So there's plenty at stake as the Old Firm collide for the final time this season. In the three previous league meetings, Celtic had a different manager at the helm in each, while Russell Martin managed one derby for Rangers before being jettisoned.

    Watch below for a recap of what has happened so far in this season's Premiership Old Firm showdowns.

    Media caption,

    Highlights: Rangers: 0-0 Celtic

    The first meeting of the sides this season was dreadfully dull, with many suggesting it was one of the lowest-quality Old Firm games ever.

    Home defender John Souttar did have the ball in the net in the first half - but it was ruled out for offside as then coaches Martin and Brendan Rodgers settled for a point.

    Media caption,

    Highlights: Celtic 1-3 Rangers

    In what was Wilfried Nancy's final game in charge of Celtic, Rangers drew level with Celtic in second place in the Premiership as Youssef Chermiti's second-half double and Mikey Moore's clincher gave Danny Rohl's side an incredible comeback win.

    Nancy's men were 1-0 up at the interval through Yang Hyun-Jun's thumping finish but failed to make their dominance count as Rangers roared back, ending Nancy's eight-game tenure in 45 ruthless minutes.

    Media caption,

    Highlights: Rangers 2-2 Celtic

    In March at Ibrox it was Celtic's turn to mount a stirring comeback, rallying from two down to rescue a dramatic point thanks to Reo Hatate's injury-time equaliser.

    Chermiti's first-half double - including a world-class overhead kick - put Rangers in the driving seat, only for O'Neill's men to hit back through Kieran Tierney and substitute Hatate.

    The result left Hearts six points clear at the top - what will be the title race state of play when the dust settles on this weekend?

  2. 'It wasn't the start I was looking for'published at 09:49 BST 8 May

    Media caption,

    Icons of Football: Henrik Larsson

    Henrik Larsson recovered from a poor Celtic debut - where his loose pass cost a goal in defeat at Hibs - to become a club legend.

    In the new series of BBC Scotland's Icons of Football, Larsson recounts his memorable career, from humble beginnings in Sweden to seven era-defining seasons at Celtic and Champions League glory with Barcelona.

    WATCH: Icons of Football: Henrik Larsson on BBC iPlayer.

  3. Defender Campbell interested in Celtic - gossippublished at 08:20 BST 8 May

    Gossip graphic

    West Bromwich Albion defender George Campbell is interested in the possibility of a summer switch to Celtic, although German clubs are keen on the United States international. (Football Insider), external

    Celtic target Eric Martel is set to make a final decision' on his future "within the next two weeks" as the 24-year-old defensive midfielder winds down his contract at Bundesliga club Koln. (Inside Futbol), external

    Winning the Scottish Premiership title would be "up there with the lot" for Celtic manager Martin O'Neill, says his former forward John Hartson. (Sun), external

    Friday's Scottish gossip

  4. Title still in Celtic's hands, says former skipper Brownpublished at 18:57 BST 7 May

    Former Celtic captain Scott BrownImage source, SNS

    Former captain Scott Brown reckons Celtic still have the edge in the Scottish Premiership race since they host leaders Hearts on the final day.

    The defending champions trail the Edinburgh side by three points and their goal difference is five inferior, with just three games remaining.

    But Brown, who spent 14 years at Celtic Park between 2007 and 2021, said his old team have to believe they can make it a meaningful last-day shootout for the title.

    "It's going to be very tight," the 40-year-old told Sky Sports. "Hearts have been the team that everyone thought eventually would die a death, if I'm honest.

    "But Derek (McInnes) has done a fantastic job of maintaining their levels. They beat Rangers (on Monday) and, watching the first half, I thought, 'it could be two or three (to Rangers)', but he changed it.

    "He's done a great job and nobody probably thought they would have been able to continue that.

    "But I still think it's in the Celtic lads' hands because if they can go and beat Rangers at the weekend, they've got Motherwell away, then the last game is Hearts at home.

    "I'm going along to that one so I'll either see Derek lifting a trophy – which I'll congratulate him on eventually – or it'll be a fantastic day for Celtic and all the fans. It'd be incredible scenes if they can go and get another trophy."

    Martin O'Neill has had two spells in charge of Celtic this season, picking up the pieces following the departures of Brendan Rodgers in October and Wilfried Nancy in January.

    "If he was to go and win the title, I think there'd be a statue getting built right outside the stadium for him because he's done some fantastic things," ex-Ayr United boss Brown said of the 74-year-old.

    "Martin seems to have the players playing as well as they possibly can, pressing high up the park, getting after teams.

    "If he was there the whole time (throughout the season), he would probably have just cruised through it.

    "But he comes in, he helps out and he's a Celtic man, he wants to do the best for Celtic and that's why all the fans love him."

  5. 'Buoyant' Celtic ready for 'spooked' Rangers visit, says O'Neillpublished at 15:17 BST 7 May

    Martin O'NeillImage source, SNS

    Martin O'Neill expects "spooked" Rangers to provide a formidable challenge in Celtic's must-win Old Firm showdown on Sunday.

    With just three games remaining Celtic trail leaders Hearts, who visit Motherwell on Saturday, by three points.

    Rangers are all but out of the running after relinquishing a 1-0 lead to lose 2-1 at Tynecastle on Monday, leaving them seven points off the top.

    "The mood is pretty buoyant for a start, that's the most important thing," manager O'Neill told Celtic TV. , external

    "Big game, really big game at the weekend and we have to win. [Expecting] a very strong challenge, obviously.

    "I think if we look back, they played exceptionally well in the first half against Hearts.

    "They were in complete control of the game, got the goal in front, Hearts were obviously going to have a reaction.

    "You can't be leading that league for that length of time and not have something and they did. It seemed as if it spooked Rangers a little bit."

    O'Neill doesn't feel the need to issue a rallying call to the Celtic fans before this weekend's derby as they "know what to do".

    "When it is all together, then there is this great feeling of unity," O'Neill added.

    "Obviously the results are the most important thing, but the power of the fans is fantastic.

    "I probably don't really need to give them a message. I think they know what to do."

  6. 'That's why he was the king' - reliving Larsson's famous derby dinkpublished at 10:40 BST 7 May

    Jack Herrall
    BBC Sport Scotland

    Media caption,

    WATCH: Icons of Football: Henrik Larsson on BBC Scotland on Thursday, 7 May at 22:00 BST

    Ask any Celtic fan which goal is their favourite from the past 30 years and one strike will likely dominate the responses.

    When Henrik Larsson brilliantly chipped the ball over Stefan Klos to put Celtic 4-1 up in August 2000, it was a seismic moment for both player and club.

    The occasion was loaded with significance. It was Martin O'Neill's first Old Firm game in charge of Celtic and the 6-2 victory set the tone for an era of dominance.

    The ease with which Larsson cut through the Rangers defence after a flick-on from Chris Sutton around the halfway line, before having the audacity to even attempt his dink, lives long in the memory of supporters.

    No one had a better view of that goal than Sutton, who after nudging it into space for Larsson could marvel from just a few yards away as he created one of the most iconic moments in Celtic history.

    Speaking to BBC Scotland for the new series of Icons of Football, with episode one focusing on Larsson, Sutton takes us step by step through the famous lob.

    "My role when the ball was coming along was to always try and flick things on for Henrik, or in this case, I knew Henrik was in and around the halfway line somewhere," Sutton says.

    "I chested it down into an area and he was sharp in his awareness of where it was gonna go.

    "Then he starts to drive at the Rangers defence and a little nutmeg on Bert Konterman and then he's one-on-one with Stefan Klos.

    "But this is what sets Henrik apart from everybody else I've played with. In that moment where he goes to finish, most normal strikers like myself wouldn't be thinking of scooping it over Klos in the Rangers goal because of the margin of error.

    "The skill level was so incredible. I'd have probably tried to slide it past Klos, but Henrik had that arrogance, confidence, whatever you want to call it, impetuousness, to just in that moment nonchalantly scoop the ball over Klos.

    "It was absolute genius from him, that's why he was the king."

    Sutton never witnessed a better goal from a Celtic team-mate and is similarly bullish on just how important that strike was for the club and the momentum they were building under O'Neill.

    The former striker adds: "I would say that's the best goal I've ever seen from a player at Celtic in all my time there because of the occasion, because of where I think that game is viewed even today.

    "There are a fair few Celtic fans out there who would view that 6-2 game as the game which turned the tide really.

    "Celtic have been really dominant of late, but I think that was a game where Celtic supporters felt that they had a foothold again and that goal pretty much epitomises that."

    WATCH: Icons of Football: Henrik Larsson on BBC Scotland on Thursday, 7 May at 22:00 BST

  7. Celtic v Rangers: Pick of the statspublished at 10:20 BST 7 May

    Stats
    • Celtic are without a win in six league meetings with Rangers (D3 L3), last going longer without a victory in the derby from September 1995 to November 1997 (10).

    • Rangers have won their past two league visits to Celtic, as many as their previous 19 beforehand (W2 D4 L13). The Ibrox side last won three successive league trips to their Old Firm rivals in November 1992 under Walter Smith.

    • Celtic have only won the final Old Firm derby of a Scottish Premiership season (including curtailed 2019-20 campaign) in one of the past seven campaigns (D2 L4), a 2-1 victory in 2023-24.

    • Celtic have won their past four league games; their longest Premiership winning run this season is five matches, which came during Martin O'Neill's first spell in charge from October to December.

    • Rangers have lost their past two league games, as many as their previous 39 beforehand (W21 D16 L2), but haven't lost three in a row since October 2000 under Dick Advocaat.

    • After overseeing a 3-1 victory at Celtic Park in January, Danny Rohl could become only the second manager to win his first two away league games against Celtic in charge of Rangers, after Walter Smith (first three from 1991 to 1992).

    • Daizen Maeda has scored three goals in Celtic's past two league games, as many as his previous 20 Premiership appearances beforehand. Maeda is looking to score in three successive appearances in the competition for the first time since March 2025 (run of five), while he has two goals in his past three league games against Rangers at Celtic Park.

    • Youssef Chermiti has scored four in two league appearances against Celtic this season, the most by a Rangers player in a single league campaign since Mark Walters in 1988-89 (also four). No player has ever scored five against their Old Firm rivals in one league season.

  8. Celtic among clubs linked with El-Faouzi - gossippublished at 08:37 BST 7 May

    Brentford, Celtic and Sunderland are interested in Soufiane El-Faouzi after the midfielder helped Schalke 04 win Bundesliga 2, with some suitors ready to pay more than £11m for the 23-year-old. (Sky Sports), external

    Celtic are aware of Premier League interest in two key midfielders, with Nottingham Forest again keen on 22-year-old Arne Engels and Tottenham Hotspur planning a bid for 24-year-old Benjamin Nygren. (TeamTalk), external

    Celtic have now scouted Scott McKenna four times as they continue to show interest in the 29-year-old Scotland centre-half who has helped Dinamo Zagreb win the Croatian league title. (Jutarnji), external

    Celtic continue to scout Motherwell midfielder Elijah Just and had the 26-year-old New Zealand international watched in action against Falkirk on Saturday as they weigh up a summer bid. (Scottish Sun), external

    Motherwell manager Jens Berthel Askou says European football would help attract better quality players to the club - and keep existing ones at Fir Park amid interest in attackers Tawanda Maswanhise and Elijah Just. (The Scotsman), external

    Former Celtic midfielder Victor Wanyama has revealed to Citizen TV in Kenya his ambition to return to the club in the future as a coach as the 34-year-old winds down his playing career. (The National), external

    Read Thursday's Scottish Gossip in full.

    Gossip graphic
  9. Why Sunday's derby is Celtic's most vital game of the seasonpublished at 14:40 BST 6 May

    Kheredine Idessane
    BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter

    Behind the mic

    Much has been made of how refreshing it is that the final derby of the season between Glasgow's big two is not, in itself, a title-decider.

    Unless, of course, the result at Celtic Park helps decide things in Hearts' favour.

    No matter the slightly diminished status of Sunday's noon kick-off, it will still be the most important game of the four the Parkhead side has left to play.

    More important than a final-day decider against Hearts? More important than the Scottish Cup final? The argument can certainly be made.

    On the line for manager Martin O'Neill and his men this weekend is a potential double bonus: entry into next term's Champions League qualifiers and the elimination of arch-rivals Rangers from the same competition.

    If Celtic win on Sunday, they're guaranteed to finish in the top two. Their chances of catching Hearts would be boosted and in one fell swoop they would also demote Rangers to third in the table.

    There would be no vital top-tier European funding for the new American regime at Ibrox with which to bankroll their ongoing rebuild.

    The nightmare scenario for Celtic fans and board alike, after the calamities of their own season, would have been to watch Rangers walk off with the Premiership - and with it the possibility of dropping directly into the league phase of the continent's premier club competition.

    It is now exceptionally unlikely Rangers can catch both Celtic and Hearts from a seven-point deficit to the league leaders with just three games left.

    Guaranteed second, at worst, isn't exactly the bar the defending champions had in mind at the start of the season but they can't be too choosy now.

    Were Hearts to drop any points at Motherwell on Saturday evening, a first league derby win over Rangers since September 2024 takes on even greater significance.

    O'Neill is keen, wherever possible, to wrest control of the title race away from Tynecastle before the top two meet a week on Saturday.

    To do so, beating Rangers will be essential unless the men from Gorgie lose at Fir Park the night before.

    Regardless of the result in Lanarkshire, putting Rangers officially out of the title race would go some way to restoring relations between the fanbase and those who run the club.

    It would give Celtic not just a final push in the defence of their title but would also give them a route into the Champions League.

    Given they couldn't get past Kairat Almaty a few months ago, no one at Parkhead is banking on that road.

    However, with the chance to reduce the title chase to a two-horse race, the opportunity to send their arch-rivals back to the drawing board, and the potential to start properly breathing down the necks of long-time leaders Hearts while guaranteeing some sort of Champions League involvement, it could easily be argued none of Celtic's four remaining games is more important than their next one.

  10. The only time O'Neill ever scolded Larssonpublished at 09:36 BST 6 May

    Jack Herrall
    BBC Sport Scotland

    Martin O'Neill and Henrik LarssonImage source, SNS

    Every great team throughout history has had a few key partnerships that fans instantly recall and fawn over.

    For many Celtic fans, the level to which manager Martin O'Neill and Henrik Larsson were on the same wavelength is just as crucial as the striker's link-up play with Chris Sutton on the park.

    It wasn't always sunshine and rainbows, though, with the sole time Larsson was on the end of O'Neill's half-time rage still a bone he picks with his former gaffer when they meet up well over 20 years later.

    "Do I remember? Absolutely, because it only happened once," O'Neill recalls when asked about giving the striker a telling off in the changing room.

    "It was against Dundee United and Henrik was playing in the first half... unlike him, he was flicking the ball all over the place.

    "I think he flicked two over the stand and they ended up down at Dens Park, he was awful in the first half.

    "So I had a go, and I think the players actually were in one aspect, secretly delighted that Henrik is getting a little bit of stick.

    "I remember it distinctly because he was brilliant in the second half, that was his response."

    Johan Mjallby, who also features in the Larsson edition of Icons of Football, was sitting next to the striker in the dressing room at the break and remembers it very well, as it was a one-off.

    He adds: "And isn't that the best way to just shut your manager's mouth off up? That's Henrik."

    In 2018 O'Neill, Sutton, and Larsson were all working during the World Cup in various punditry capacities, and when they met up, there was one item on the agenda for the Swede.

    "The three of us went for something to eat, and that was the topic of conversation for about half an hour," O'Neill says.

    "Henrik still hadn't forgiven me for embarrassing him in front of the rest of the team, but it stood him in good stead, and he's fine."

    WATCH: Icons of Football: Henrik Larsson on BBC Scotland on Thursday, 7 May at 22:00 BST

  11. Celtic linked with Leonard and Stewart - gossippublished at 09:24 BST 6 May

    Celtic have put Marc Leonard firmly on their summer radar and will continue to monitor the 24-year-old midfielder in his final three games of the season on loan to title rivals Hearts from Birmingham City. (Daily Record), external

    Celtic are keeping tabs on Falkirk striker Barney Stewart and have the 22-year-old on their radar as an option to bolster their attack this summer. (Football Insider), external

    RB Leipzig are closely monitoring Arne Engels with a departure from Celtic planned this summer and with clubs from the Premier League, Serie A and La Liga also keen on the 22-year-old midfielder. (Florian Plettenberg on X), external

    Highly-rated 15-year-old Celtic striker Zion Pullan has been called up for Spain for the first time. (The Herald), external

    Read Wednesday's Scottish Gossip in full.

    Heart of Midlothian's Marc LeonardImage source, SNS
    Image caption,

    Marc Leonard is on loan to Hearts from Birmingham City

  12. Will recent title wins & momentum get Celtic over the line?published at 16:49 BST 5 May

    Tino
    Fan writer

    Celtic fan voice graphic

    There was plenty of reaction after Hearts' big win at Tynecastle on Monday, but from a Celtic point of view, the result was probably the least best outcome.

    Whatever the result, Celtic stood to benefit in some way and we now simply have to crack on with where it all leaves us.

    In an ideal world, a draw would have suited best, meaning both of our rivals dropped points. And even a Rangers win might have helped by keeping Hearts alongside us on 73 points.

    But there's no point dwelling now on what may have been. And at this stage of the season, all Celtic can do – and all Celtic should do – is try our very best to truly control our own results.

    And to their credit that's exactly what Celtic have done in recent weeks .

    Five games, five wins. A run that's kept us firmly in the title race, and which has given us some much-needed momentum heading into the final stretch.

    And now, everything comes down to this one defining final week of the league season.

    And what a week it could be.

    First up, it's Rangers at Celtic Park on Sunday coming. Then a midweek trip to Fir Park to face Motherwell. And finally, the league campaign closes at home to Hearts in what could be a dramatic final-day showdown.

    And with a three-point gap at the top there's still a chance it could come down to goal difference, which would set up an intriguing scenario on the final day.

    Needing to overturn a five-goal deficit over Hearts wouldn't be easy, but it wouldn't be impossible either.

    However, I have a feeling it won't come down to that.

    Hearts, for all their momentum, are not immune to a stumble.

    Motherwell - who they face on Saturday - have already taken league points off them twice this season. And Falkirk, who they'll play in their penultimate game, knocked them out of the Scottish Cup (at Tynecastle) not so long ago.

    Six points from their next two matches is no guarantee.

    There's also a question of mentality. Some of the celebrations after their win over Rangers hinted at a belief that the job may already be done.

    But after a 66-year wait for a title, you have to be careful of getting ahead of yourself - and that could prove dangerous. Complacency at this stage may be Hearts' biggest enemy.

    From a Celtic perspective however, none of that matters just yet. Our focus can only be centred on Sunday.

    Rangers arrive at Celtic Park with nothing to lose, and that makes them unpredictable.

    They've often looked more dangerous when the pressure is off, and how many times have we witnessed that in recent years.

    But, if we approach this one with anything less than full intensity, full focus, then the three points will be anything but a guarantee.

    There are reasons for optimism though.

    The five-game winning run has created real momentum, and there's a renewed sense of belief around the squad.

    Contributions are coming from right across the team, with the likes of Kelechi Iheanacho, Daizen Maeda and Alistair Johnston all stepping up at just the right time.

    Ultimately, this crazy season for Celtic now comes down to one week of fixtures.

    Three games, nine points, and - somehow - everything still to play for.

    Stay focused, lean on the experiences of recent title wins, and keep the momentum going.

    And it might just be enough to get us over the line.

    Tino can be found at The Celtic Exchange, external

  13. Who made BBC's Premiership team of the week?published at 16:12 BST 5 May

    Jonathan Sutherland
    Sportscene presenter

    Jonathan Sutherland's team of the week graphic

    Max Stryjek - Kilmarnock

    A clean sheet for the keeper who underwent heart surgery earlier in the season - a remarkable story.

    Findlay Curtis - Kilmarnock

    Kilmarnock manager Neil McCann put him at right-back and it proved a masterstroke as Curtis scored when Killie blew Dundee United away.

    Craig Halkett - Hearts

    A giant performance from the Hearts centre-back in a seismic victory against title rivals Rangers.

    Ryan Astley - Dundee

    Solid showing as Dundee earned a clean sheet and a vital three points.

    Stephen Kingsley - Hearts

    Great reactions to grab that vital Hearts equaliser.

    Yang Hyun-Jun - Celtic

    Celtic were not scintillating again, but Yang was a bright spark against 10-man Hibs.

    Brad Spencer - Falkirk

    The captain set the tone as his side once again got the better of Motherwell.

    Aaron Tshibola - Kilmarnock

    Great overall performance at the heart of the Killie midfield.

    Joe Westley - Dundee

    A big goal that takes the heat off any Dundee survival anxiety.

    Kelechi Iheanacho - Celtic

    He brought that scalpel-like sharpness in the Celtic penalty box that the defending champions sorely needed.

    Lawrence Shankland - Hearts

    The Hearts captain underlined his credentials as an inspirational leader once again with a goal of seismic proportions. His ability as a striker is clearly never in question, but even by his standards the left-foot finish to sink Rangers was outstanding.

  14. 'Henrik was the main guy, I was the foil' - Suttonpublished at 10:07 BST 5 May

    Jack Herrall
    BBC Sport Scotland

    Henrik Larsson and Chris SuttonImage source, SNS

    "I did get a feeling early on with Henrik that it would click and we would work well with each other."

    One hundred and forty-four matches, 109 wins, and six major trophies later, it's fair to say Chris Sutton got rather more than he bargained for when he linked up with Henrik Larsson.

    Seldom before or since has a strike partnership been so efficient and entertaining for Celtic, with fans pining for something similar ever since.

    Speaking to BBC Scotland for a new series of Icons of Football, with an episode centring on Larsson, the former Blackburn striker says the almost psychic understanding in their play together wasn't an accident.

    "We did discuss it, but that understanding comes from training, it comes from playing, and it comes from building that relationship," Sutton says.

    "And then it's knowing what suits each other. My role in the team was to be the link man, the foil.

    "Henrik was quicker than me - and let's be honest, most people were quicker than me - so I always had to have that awareness.

    "If we were playing against quite a high line, I'd hold the ball and clip it in behind and Henrik would already be on the move.

    "So as soon as the ball's on the way to me, I know that if I can help it into space, Henrik would be going, and the opposition defence would be getting deeper."

    It wasn't all tactical intricacies or in-depth discussions about every game, either.

    Sutton and Larsson based their link-up play on a foundation of the basics: hard work, clear communication, and a clear understanding of each other's roles.

    In their 144 matches together, Larsson bagged a hugely impressive 130 goals, while Sutton notched 66, with both players assisting the other 12 times.

    Sutton adds: "That was our thing - always working hard to make sure we stayed within 10 or 15 yards of each other. Then it didn't matter who the defenders were; you work little combinations and little moves.

    "I was relatively experienced, albeit after an iffy season at Chelsea the year before. But I did get a feeling early on with Henrik that it would click and we would work well with each other.

    "When things are telepathic, you just know where somebody is. I'm sitting here now and I can imagine Larsson over my shoulder, but that was because of Henrik's intelligence.

    "As a player, there's nothing better than walking on to the field knowing that if you get the right service and the right ball, you can cause any defence all sorts of problems.

    "I think when we were in our pomp, that's what we could do - and certainly Henrik was the main guy."

    WATCH: Icons of Football: Henrik Larsson on BBC Scotland on Thursday, 7 May at 22:00 BST

  15. Celtic tracking Austrian goalkeeper - gossippublished at 07:58 BST 5 May

    Wlfosberger goalkeeper Nikolas PolsterImage source, NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Celtic have joined the list of clubs keeping tabs on Wolfsberger goalkeeper Nikolas Polster, who has been compared to Manuel Neuer (Daily Mail)., external

    Several clubs are interested in signing Celtic forward Benjamin Nygren this summer (Fabrizio Romano on X), external.

  16. Celtic fans 'ageing with every game' after 'nail-biting' winpublished at 10:00 BST 4 May

    Your opinions

    We asked for your views after Celtic edged past 10-man Hibernian to move level on points at the Scottish Premiership summit.

    Here's what some of you had to say:

    Stephen: Celtic got there in the end but, man, that was hard work and nervy again. If they hadn't won, I think that handball call that wasn't made at Hibs' goal would have been spoken about more. Can anyone explain why it wasn't given?

    Kev: Just about deserved it. The lateral passing against 10 men beggars belief. Be positive, go forward and don't be afraid to have a shot. Once again, Liam Scales' poor passing caused a goal, helped by shocking goalkeeping. We still found a way, however. It's going to the wire. We've been there and done it before. Martin O'Neill should have a statue made for him if he manages to win the league after the mess he came into.

    Neil: Three points are essential at this point in proceedings. We should have been 3-0 up by half-time but the performance lacked tempo and some composure in front of goal. Good to see Alistair Johnston back. Big week ahead.

    Ian: Inching our way towards the title! We could have been 4-0 up at half-time. It could have finished 2-2 in the dying moments and all been over. What a season! Ageing quietly here with every game, but if we can somehow pull this off, it'll all be worth it.

    Spike: What's the point in being negative when there are three games to go and nine points would probably deliver the title? Hard games coming up, however somehow Celtic keep getting over the line. It's all down to the manager and bringing unity back to the club, at least for the run-in.

    Sting: Nail-biting until the final whistle. Celtic's lack of goalscoring ability up front almost cost them the game, as well as the lack of real defensive skill, which is the number one requirement if you are going to play a passing-out-from-defence game. As good a stopper as Scales is, he makes at least one blunder per game which, in this case, was followed by a comedy of errors and led to the equaliser. What a great season though, with every game for each of the top three being a must-win from the split!

  17. O'Neill verdict on Celtic deal for Iheanachopublished at 08:34 BST 4 May

    Scottish gossip

    Celtic interim manager Martin O'Neill thinks Kelechi Iheanacho would benefit from a full pre-season should the club extend the 29-year-old striker's contract beyond this summer. (The National), external

    Celtic centre-half Hayato Inamura says countryman Daizen Maeda has urged him to return and make another attempt to have an impact in Europe after the 23-year-old's loan spell back in their Japanese homeland with Tokyo. (The Herald), external

  18. 'Who knows anymore?' – Newell feared VAR would disallow goalpublished at 08:32 BST 4 May

    Brian McLauchlin
    BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter

    Joe Newell and refereeImage source, SNS

    Hibernian captain Joe Newell says he feared his equaliser against Celtic was going to be ruled out when a VAR check was announced for a potential handball by the midfielder.

    The goal was allowed to stand due to insufficient evidence being shown to the VAR, Don Robertson, therefore the on-field decision of a goal stood.

    Newell, whose side went on to lose the game 2-1, says the rules regarding the incident are fairly complex for everyone involved.

    "To be completely honest, who knows the rules anymore? I don't know. Being completely honest, I thought my arm was by my side for starters," he said.

    "I haven't seen any replay, that's the truth. So I don't know. But just from what I remember, I felt like it was kind of between my hip bone and my arm.

    "And I don't know if it hit it or not. But I didn't have that elation because I kind of thought, hmm, who knows now.

    "And then when it was getting checked and it was an offside check and a handball check, you're kind of thinking, oh, it's not going to go your way. I've not seen any replays or anything.

    "So I don't actually know. But yeah, who knows anymore? I don't know. You know the rule. I don't know the rule. Who knows?".

    Celtic scored a winner in the second half, but Newell says his team are giving themselves mountains to climb by having players sent off.

    Jamie McGrath was the fourth Hibs player to see red in their past three matches.

    "There's a lot to be done with 10 men again," he said. "The boys dug in as expected. As I would expect, as everyone kind of expects of that group.

    "But we fell short. It's a bit of a killer that comes from a set-piece. You kind of always feel like that can be avoided. So on the whole, I thought we defended really well again.

    "I feel like we just were not giving ourselves enough of a chance - nowhere near enough of a chance - to get a foothold in any game."

    The official attendance was over 18,000, but there were huge gaps where Hibs season ticket holders decided not to attend.

    Some Hibs fans were not concerned about losing on Sunday because the result would not have aided Hearts' chances of winning the title.

    Newell says he could sense the atmosphere was not quite what he would expect for such an important game.

    "Going out for the warm-up, you can see the crowd. I don't know the exact numbers, but you can see it was a bit lower than usual," he added.

    "One thing I would say, I completely get it. I've got plenty of mates who are Hibs fans and they've all been speaking to me. So I completely understand the situation.

    "But you play for Hibernian Football Club. This is a massive, massive club - a massive privilege.

    "So every time you go out there, you're expected to play for the fans, for the people who turn up, for the club, the manager, yourself and the team. And that's the way it was."