Celtic

Scores & Fixtures

  • Scottish Premiership
    Full time
    Celtic
    3
    Falkirk
    1
  • Scottish Premiership
    Hibernian
    plays
    Celtic
  • Scottish Premiership
    Celtic
    plays
    Rangers
  • Scottish Premiership
    Motherwell
    plays
    Celtic
  • Scottish Premiership
    Celtic
    plays
    Hearts
  • Scottish Cup
    Celtic
    plays
    Dunfermline Athletic

Latest updates

  1. O'Neill's experience vital for Celtic title charge - Vegapublished at 15:10 BST

    Martin O'NeillImage source, SNS

    Former Celtic defender Ramon Vega thinks the stability that Martin O'Neill brings to the club will be vital if they are to lift the Premiership trophy.

    Vega joined Celtic on loan from Tottenham in December 2000 during O'Neill's first spell in charge of the club and made 18 appearances during his brief spell.

    And the 54-year-old thinks his former manager's experience will be crucial if Celtic want to win this season's Premiership title.

    The Parkhead club are three points behind leaders Hearts and one ahead of Rangers heading into the final four games of the season.

    "It's always important to have experience like Martin O'Neill's," Vega told the BBC's Sacked in the Morning.

    "He gives stability to the club to start with, he is familiar to the fans as well. Some of the best experiences they have ever had have been with Martin O'Neill. I would say he's a legend of the club.

    "It was a good shout to keep him while they are looking for a permanent solution, but also they need to look into how they want to be in the future, in terms of the players they have to bring in.

    "But Martin O'Neill brings that stability in, without a doubt. He's respected all around, he's done an extremely good job for the club.

    "To bring such credibility back into the club, but also the stability, there is no doubt that it was a good move and could be crucial for winning the league."

  2. Celtic continue to rely on old guard - but for how long?published at 11:05 BST

    Kheredine Idessane
    BBC Sport Scotland Senior Reporter

    Behind the mic

    That Celtic could still win two trophies in this most jaw-droppingly turbulent campaign is quite remarkable.

    It speaks to the managerial skills of interim boss Martin O'Neill but also to a key core of go-to players who have had precious little help from those recruited, supposedly, to help them.

    James Forrest will be 35 this summer and has just signed yet another contract extension with his boyhood heroes. He may well hang up his boots in 2027, having never played for anyone else.

    Captain Callum McGregor's minutes are being meticulously managed. The clear implication being Celtic can't possibly do without their main man, even if he's not fully fit.

    He'll be 33 soon, has had some injury problems this season and yet has still made over 50 appearances this term.

    Special mention, too, to Kieran Tierney, who seems to have put his myriad injury problems at other clubs behind him and has delivered in defence and attack.

    Japan forward Daizen Maeda has three goals in his past two games. An extra yard of pace restored to someone who was already frighteningly quick. Leading the Celtic press in a way he hasn't since his remarkable player of the year season last term.

    Forrest, McGregor, Tierney and Maeda - men Celtic have relied heavily on for much of their success in recent years.

    Two other good servants, Liam Scales and Luke McCowan, were also rewarded recently with extended contracts. Scales was signed in 2021; McCowan three summers later. All are delivering for the club, some more than others.

    Where, though, are this season's new recruits? The players signed, some of them, for relatively eye-watering amounts who were supposed to help ease the burden?

    About £10m spent on wingers Sebastian Tounekti and Michel-Ange Balikwisha, supposedly to take over from Forrest and Yang Hyun-jun in the absence of the injured Jota.

    Tounekti has scored two Premiership goals since his arrival, at least he has played. The same can't be said of Balikwisha, who has contributed hardly anything at all since a forgettable derby debut at Rangers at the end of August.

    The less said about the acquisitions of Shin Yamada and Hayato Inamura, the better. For fairness and balance, Benjamin Nygren, Marcelo Saracchi and Julian Araujo (before injury ended his season) are proof recruitment wasn't wholly disastrous.

    What though of the January arrivals? Where are Tomas Cvancara, Junior Adamu and Joel Mvuka? Nowhere near the starting line-up at present, any of them.

    The latter has only made two brief, wholly unimpressive Scottish Cup cameos. Zero contribution to the fraught race for the league title.

    From Adamu's six appearances, only three were starts. Of those, he only reappeared for the second half once. His late equaliser against Dundee, however, did keep Celtic in the Scottish Cup.

    Cvancara made a good initial impression before fading fast. He'll be remembered for the cool penalty that sent Rangers crashing out of the Scottish Cup at Ibrox but hasn't even made the last two matchday squads.

    Despite all of this, Celtic are five games away from a league and cup double. Martin O'Neill has had no option but to turn back to the old faithful. The key question now is how long can they continue to deliver?

  3. Celtic target Doumbia rated at £13m - gossippublished at 08:33 BST

    Venezia midfielder Issa DoumbiaImage source, Getty Images

    Celtic remain interested in Venezia midfielder Issa Doumbia, along with Club Brugge, Espanyol and Southampton, but the 22-year-old's value has soared after an impressive season in Serie B. (Gazzetta dello Sport via Daily Record - subscription required), external

    Celtic are lining up a permanent move for Marcelo Saracchi but a deal for the 28-year-old left-back on loan from Boca Juniors is on ice until a new manager is appointed. (The Herald - subscription required), external

    Celtic winger James Forrest insists he's still dreaming of a World Cup call-up for Scotland, with the 34-year-old saying he would never closed the door on adding to his 39 caps. (Daily Record - subscription required), external

  4. Celtic must ditch 'market snobbery' in huge summer rebuildpublished at 13:17 BST 28 April

    Tino
    Fan writer

    Celtic fan voice

    How many of the following players will still be at Celtic Park next season?

    Daizen Maeda. Reo Hatate. Kelechi Iheanacho. Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain. Arne Engels. Benji Nygren. Paulo Bernardo. Michel-Ange Balikwisha. Kasper Schmeichel.

    Potentially none.

    Engels and Nygren are probably our most attractive assets - young, talented and drawing attention.

    If bids arrive in the ballpark of £20m-plus for either player, can the club say no? Any new manager would love both to stay, but that's modern football.

    Then there's the ticking clock. Maeda shortly enters the final year of his contract and will almost certainly move on this summer, either before or after his World Cup with Japan.

    Countryman Hatate with two years left is possibly less in demand, but it seems too his time at Celtic may be coming to a close.

    The wildcards are Oxlade-Chamberlain and Iheanacho. Talent isn't the issue for either, but fitness seems to be.

    If they can find their levels then both can definitely be assets. If not then they too may be offloaded.

    And separately, for different reasons, none of Schmeichel, Bernardo and Balikwisha look to be part of the long-term picture at the club.

    Add loan players Marcelo Saracchi, Benjamin Arthur, Tomas Cvancara, Junior Adamu, Joel Mvuka and Julian Araujo and that's 15 players that could potentially vacate the squad.

    Which is why you would hope our planning for next season must already be in full swing.

    But can it be with a Paul Tisdale-sized hole in our scouting and recruitment team following his January exit? Who is currently heading up this area of the football department?

    Clarity on that front, as well as elsewhere, must surely be forthcoming.

    But for whoever takes the lead, it should be noted there is some impressive talent right here on our doorstep in Scotland.

    Players delivering week in, week out in the Premiership who could step up immediately. Elliot Watt, Lukas Fadinger and Elijah Just of Motherwell. Ex-Celtic academy product Calvin Miller lighting it up at Falkirk. Miguel Chaiwa impressing at Hibs. Claudio Braga producing at Hearts.

    But Celtic have, at times, for whatever reason, shown a reluctance to opt for what's right in front of them - almost a type of market snobbery that has led to us missing out on a number of proven talents over the years.

    That has to change, especially in a summer where such a turnover of players is expected.

    This isn't a call to 'shop locally' and nowhere else. But it is a call for smart domestic recruitment with a range of further additions from elsewhere.

    The scale of the rebuild this summer dictates it'll be a busy one for all at the club - or at least it should be.

    But the resources are there, the opportunities are there, and by the time the final whistle blows at Hampden on 23 May, the work should already be well under way.

    It could be a defining summer for Celtic. It should be a defining summer. Let's see what direction the club choose to take.

    Tino can be found at The Celtic Exchange, external

  5. 'Away allocations will do well to survive this'published at 11:31 BST 28 April

    CopImage source, SNS

    Will the latest Old Firm ticket row signal the end of away allocations in the fixture?

    The SPFL are this week due to decide whether to uphold Celtic's refusal to give Rangers tickets for the derby at Parkhead on 10 May unless the Union Bears ultras group is excluded.

    The row comes in the aftermath of disorder at the Scottish Cup quarter-final on 8 March when spectators from both clubs entered the pitch after Celtic won on penalties at Ibrox.

    It is an issue "so toxic" that the league sub-committee responsible for the adjudication should be "wearing hazmat suits", says The Herald football writer Stephen McGowan.

    Speaking on the BBC's Scottish Football Podcast, he added: "You fear for away allocations as we know them at the moment, I think they'll do well to survive us.

    "The SFA are having an independent inquiry at the moment where they will try and pin exactly where responsibility should be attributed for what happened on 8 March.

    "They will make their findings known probably in the summer, the problem is they've got a game at Parkhead to get to before then on 10 May, and basically this comes down to a dispute between the two teams on how you should handle the Ultra problem.

    "Celtic think, as they've shown - they banned the Green Brigade for five months - it should be collective punishment, you should hit them en masse. Rangers take the view it should be more of an individual thing. Celtic clearly think Rangers have been a bit weak on this issue.

    "Rangers say no, they can't lay down the law to us on who we can sell tickets to. It's the eternal story of football in Glasgow, it's two bitter rivals who will not yield to one another.

    "It's going to be to some poor souls on the SPFL board to decide who's right and who gets their way over this.

    "I think if the SPFL uphold this Celtic stance then Rangers absolutely will reciprocate and that would be regrettable.

    "But equally if we see that the police are struggling to deal with large-scale allocations, it might be unavoidable in the long term, it might well be the way we have to go just to try and kind of cool minds and bring some sanity back to the situation."

    An image detailing how to follow your Premier League team on BBC Sport: "On the app? Tap the bell icon to get news about your club sent to you. Signed in on a browser? Hit 'Follow' to stay up to date.
  6. Maloney targets Celtic director of football role - gossippublished at 08:11 BST 28 April

    Shaun MaloneyImage source, SNS

    Assistant Shaun Maloney has no interest in succeeding Martin O'Neill as Celtic manager, but is keen on the vacant director of football role at Parkhead. (Football Insider), external

    Martin O'Neill expects Celtic to sell Daizen Maeda this summer if the Japan forward does not sign a new deal. (The Herald - subscription required), external

    Celtic have set a date for talks with Boca Juniors over the permanent signing of left-back Marcelo Saracchi. (German Garcia Grova on X), external

  7. This Is Fans Only: Are Hearts winning the title? - Watch livepublished at 16:17 BST 27 April

    This Is Fans Only

    ARE HEARTS DESTINED TO WIN THE TITLE? 🏆

    It was a seismic weekend in the hunt for the Scottish Premiership crown. Are you rejoicing, are you quietly optimistic, or are you chucking it?

    Join the debate with Ray Bradshaw at 18:00 BST TONIGHT on the BBC Sport Scottish Football YouTube channel, external to give us your views in the chat. The show is fully interactive, so have your say.

    Remember to like and subscribe to not miss it!

  8. 'Celtic still hanging in there'published at 12:34 BST 27 April

    Media caption,

    Watch the Sportscene panel discuss Daizen Maeda's performance as he scored two of Celtic's three goals

    Former Rangers midfielder Kevin Thomson believes it would be a remarkable story whoever wins the Scottish Premiership title, but thinks Celtic's home advantage on the final day could prove pivotal.

    Martin O'Neill's side trail Hearts by three points with four matches remaining and they host the Tynecastle outfit on the final day of the season.

    Hearts play Rangers next Monday, while Celtic travel to Hibernian on Sunday.

    "They've all actually got their own wee story of success - when you think of Hearts, it would be an astronomical achievement if they can go on and win the title," Thomson said on the BBC's Scottish Football Podcast.

    "Celtic have sacked two managers this year, Martin O'Neill's had two different stints as interim. If he can find a way to get his Celtic team to get over the line.

    "When Danny Rohl took over from Russell Martin, nobody gave Rangers any chance.

    "So it's amazing - the climax of the season has been so exciting. I cannot call it.

    "I would never write Celtic off because I'm not naive enough to. I've never done it as a player. I certainly wouldn't do it as a pundit or as ex-player.

    "But I certainly do think, if Hearts can beat Rangers, regardless of what Celtic do, I think it puts Rangers to bed and then it becomes a two-horse race.

    "The advantage that Celtic would have is home advantage when that game comes around.

    "The good bit from Celtic's perspective is they're still hanging in there. They're still there, they've still got a chance and they've not been at their brilliant best by any stretch of imagination."

  9. Who made BBC's Premiership team of the week?published at 11:21 BST 27 April

    Jonathan Sutherland
    Sportscene presenter

    Team of the week

    GK: Jerome Prior - Livingston

    Five big saves of every variety to keep St Mirren at bay as Livingston finally earned a long-awaited victory.

    RB: Stephen O'Donnell - Motherwell

    Having a wonderful season under Jens Berthel Askou. Asked to play on the left and wasn't an issue. Two assists for the former Scotland international, who can easily slot into right-back for me here.

    CB: Ryan McGowan - Livingston

    Did all the unfashionable graft a centre-back has to do at times to earn his side a seldom seen three points.

    CB: Kieran Tierney - Celtic

    Seven goals for club and country this season. Another rasper against Falkirk.

    LB: Emmanuel Longelo - Motherwell

    Unleashed in a further forward role than left-back, but he can slot in there easily for me here. What a player he has been all season. Two huge goals as Motherwell underlined their kingmaker credentials in this incredible title race.

    CM: Blair Spittal - Hearts

    Off the bench to score what could be one of the most pivotal winners of the season for Hearts at Easter Road.

    CM: Callum Slattery - Motherwell

    Back from suspension and exemplified the quality Motherwell showed in abundance at Ibrox.

    RW: Sabah Kerjota - Hearts

    The Albanian was a game-changer as Derek McInnes brought him on to find the path through the stubborn Hibs defence. Kerjota duly delivered, not once but twice. His contribution to the Hearts title push was immense.

    AM: Martin Boyle - Hibernian

    In his last Edinburgh derby he took his goal superbly, couldn't have caught it any sweeter.

    LW: Will Ferry - Dundee United

    Hadn't scored a single goal for Dundee United until his strike against Celtic a few weeks ago. Now he can't stop. Great work rate and quality again from the wide man as he made all the difference in the Dundee derby.

    ST: Daizen Maeda - Celtic

    Like a phoenix rising from the flames, is Maeda rising at just the right time to fire Celtic to the title? Celtic's opening two goals came from his tenacity and pressing, and their third - Maeda's second - was instinctive striker play.

  10. Watch Celtic keep title hopes alive with win v Falkirkpublished at 18:04 BST 26 April

    Media caption,

    Watch all the highlights as Celtic kept their Scottish Premiership title hopes alive with a 3-1 win over Falkirk. Available to UK users only

  11. Celtic 'still a long way from home' in title race - O'Neillpublished at 18:03 BST 26 April

    Martin O'NeillImage source, SNS

    Manager Martin O'Neill doesn't think momentum is with Celtic despite their 3-1 home win over Falkirk on Saturday.

    The Parkhead club were the first of the top three to play this weekend and laid down a marker to Hearts and Rangers with their victory.

    And the Northern Irishman was delighted with the home crowd as they helped spur the team on to a win.

    "I think the support we got was terrific," O'Neill said.

    "They stayed with the team when there were moments of anxiety which I thought we showed for a little period of time and which could have spilled over into the crowd.

    "They stayed with us, which was fantastic."

    Celtic travel to Hibs next weekend before welcoming Rangers to Parkhead in their next two post-split fixtures.

    They then visit Motherwell at Fir Park and end the campaign at home to leaders Hearts.

    "We have a tough task next week," the Northern Irishman added.

    "We have been battling strongly. We showed some fine play, made some mistakes which could have been costly.

    "But we got a grip of that and the introduction of Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain brought a calmness to us.

    "In terms of momentum, I don't know. We are still a long way from home."

  12. 'Unlikely double still in Celtic's hands'published at 12:10 BST 26 April

    Your opinions

    Celtic fans, we asked for your views on Saturday's 3-1 win over Falkirk.

    Here's what some of you had to say:

    Ian: Probably the best they have played all season - apart from let's all have a nap for a few minutes in the second half. Still not sure about not having a bustling centre half up front.

    David: Where has that Daizen Maeda been all season? What a difference. Celtic weren't great but boy did Daizen make us tick much better. His best game of the season by a mile. Celtic are beginning to tick.

    Peter: A huge three points and an improved performance. Four more league games, four wins is a must. Getting big players back at this stage of the season will be vital. The title is still up for grabs.

    David T: Say what you want about this Celtic team, and as average as they've been, that's another crucial three points with four games to go. Plus a cup final to look forward to. Not sure what some fans want. The most unlikely of doubles in our history is in our hands and I truly believe it's meant to be for Celtic and Martin O'Neill, keep the faith.

    Finbar: Celtic have to win their remaining games, so attack is the only option. The team was set up for goals and Maeda and Kieran Tierney delivered. Why is Benjamin Nygren taking corner kicks? He's more effective in the six-yard box. Maintaining momentum in each match and in the league run-in is the challenge for Celtic.

    John: I thought they played well enough on the day against a decent opponent. The main objective is to keep winning. We have to hope the other teams around us drop some points in the remaining games. Considering everything that has gone on this season we are in a decent position to still win the league. Positive thinking.

  13. Celtic keen on manager Frank - gossippublished at 09:46 BST 26 April

    Thomas FrankImage source, Getty Images

    Celtic have set their sights on a move to appoint Thomas Frank but the former Tottenham and Brentford manager would need some convincing to come to Scotland. (Football Insider), external

    The SPFL hope to make a call on the latest Old Firm away tickets row by Monday evening, with Rangers complaining after Celtic refused to hand over the 2,200 allocation for the 10 May derby unless the Union Bears ultras group are barred. (Daily Record - subscription required), external

  14. Celtic 3-1 Falkirk: Have your saypublished at 20:27 BST 25 April

    HYS

    Celtic moved level on points with Scottish Premiership leaders Hearts as Daizen Maeda's double and a Kieran Tierney strike secured a vital - and at times nervy - win over Falkirk.

    Read the match report here.

    Have your say on the match here.

  15. Celtic 3-1 Falkirk: What the manager saidpublished at 20:20 BST 25 April

    Martin O'NeillImage source, SNS

    Celtic manager Martin O'Neill tells BBC Scotland: "Tough game today, knew it would be as well too.

    "I thought Falkirk might have shown maybe a hangover from last week, didn't look that way at all.

    "They came out and played, and the pitch is so fantastic that anybody would want to play here.

    "So from our viewpoint, we're delighted we've won, we played some really decent stuff and stuck at it and at a time when Falkirk came roaring into the game.

    "I thought we saw it through, and Daizen Maeda was fantastic.

    "He got us a goal last week out of nothing in the first minute of the game, he scores two today, he's been fantastic.

    "He's really coming back to form, and it's a good time for us at this minute, he was outstanding today."

  16. O'Neill insists Celtic board are behind contract calls - gossippublished at 13:16 BST 25 April

    Martin O'NeillImage source, SNS

    Martin O'Neill says he is playing a role in future-proofing Celtic beyond the summer - but he insists final decisions rest with the club's board. (Daily Record), external

    The interim Celtic boss insists the club's hierarchy are behind the new deals being offered to players, following the contract extensions of Liam Scales, Luke McCowan and James Forrest. (Scottish Sun), external

    Captain Callum McGregor warned that he could leave Celtic this summer if the club fail to show ambition and team-mate Forrest agrees. (The Herald - subscription required), external

    Interim Celtic manager O'Neill has sung the praises of Arne Engels amid fresh reports suggesting Lazio are interested in the midfielder. (The Herald - subscription required), external

  17. Celtic fans 'baffled' by contract decisionspublished at 09:04 BST 25 April

    your views graphic

    We asked for your thoughts after Liam Scales and Luke McCowan were rewarded with contract extensions at Celtic.

    Here are some of your views:

    Grant: Cheap biscuit-tin mentality from the board again! Scales is a bomb scare at times - slow at spotting options ahead of him and gives the ball away needlessly. He always has a mistake in him and fouls players constantly, even when under no pressure. McCowan is barely used as a substitute, so why another two years? I'm baffled by these decisions. We should be upgrading, not settling for mediocrity. No wonder we're in the position we're in now. Absolute joke.

    John: Who's making these decisions? What if the new manager comes in and decides these players aren't for him? Madness!

    Andy: I think it's great. I do want to see McCowan play more. But I'm already fearing this is the club getting ready for another window where players - and potential managers - are touted, only for there to be next to no activity. Then, as deadline day looms, yet again a handful of loans or unfit players with no clubs show up.

    Gary: Absolute joke. Neither one is anywhere near good enough. They're supposed to be short-term solutions, not long-term ones. The fact they've given extensions to three below-par players (James Forrest included) is baffling. Somehow we're still in the title hunt, but next season I think we'll be miles off.

    Dec: Announcing multi-year deals for players when the club doesn't have a permanent manager is just another layer to the rotting onion that is Celtic FC. Who's to say a new manager will even want Scales and McCowan in their squad next season? McCowan isn't a regular starter in what is the worst Celtic midfield in decades. What has he done to justify a new deal, aside from being a childhood Celtic fan?

    Michael: Terrible decision. Both are squad players at best. Scales is a mistake waiting to happen, and McCowan is a bottom-six midfielder in the SPFL.

  18. Celtic v Falkirk: Team newspublished at 00:05 BST 25 April

    Celtic's Hyunjun Yang and Falkirk's Kyrell WilsonImage source, SNS

    Celtic centre-half Liam Scales returns from suspension, while right-back Alistair Johnston could be back in the squad after long-term injury.

    Striker Callum Osmand is also back in training after also recovering from a hamstring problem.

    But Jota, Colby Donovan, Julian Araujo, Kasper Schmeichel and Cameron Carter-Vickers remain out.

    Falkirk have lost goalkeeper Scott Bain, on-loan Swansea City full-back Filip Lissah and centre-half Liam Henderson through injury.

    Louie Marsh and Ethan Williams were already both out for the season.