Glasgow Times

BARTON BLEWIT

Broony: Joey’s wind-ups put Gers under pressure

- By MATTHEW LINDSAY

SCOTT BROWN today suggested Joey Barton put unnecessar­y pressure on Rangers before their last game against Celtic – and predicted they will perform better without him.

Barton had claimed the Celtic captain wasn’t in the same league as him and de- clared he would be the best player in Scotland this season after signing a two-year deal at Ibrox in the summer.

But the 34-year-old Englishman was unable to prevent Mark Warburton’s side from being humiliated 5-1 in a Ladbrokes Premiershi­p match at Parkhead last month and has since been suspended following a training ground bust-up.

Brown refused to respond to the

former Newcastle United, Manchester City and Queens Park Rangers player’s remarks when he was still involved at the Ladbrokes Championsh­ip winners.

However, as he looked ahead to the Betfred Cup semi-final against Rangers at Hampden on Sunday afternoon he predicted the game would be far tighter than their last encounter due to his absence.

“For me he tried to wind the whole game up and to be about him,” he said. “For me he put his team-mates under a lot of pressure while we kept focused and just worried about our game, no-one else’s. I just did my talking on the park rather than in the media.”

Asked if he wished that Barton, who has been charged by the SFA with 44 counts of breaching their strict anti-gambling regulation­s, was available to play in the semi-final, he said: “It would have been fun.”

Brown was also questioned about what he thought about the fact that Barton, who now looks almost certain to part company with Rangers, had only lasted for one Celtic game. He said: “After the last performanc­e, it’s quite amusing. It is what it is. It’s done and dusted.”

Brown, whose team was beaten 2-0 by Borussia Monchengla­dbach in a Champions League group game at Parkhead on Wednesday night, stressed that it was unrealisti­c to expect Celtic to beat Rangers by a comfortabl­e margin again.

However, the 31-year-old did admit that he and his team mates would have a point to prove after suffering such a disappoint­ing result in their latest Group C outing.

“It will always be tighter (after a big win) because the losing team never wants to get beaten,” he said. “They will start well, we’ll start well and it’s about who wants to win the battle. Then it comes down to quality and hopefully we have enough to win through to the final.

“I think a few of the fans think it will be easy, but it’s never going to be that easy. You have to win battles, have belief and push on. We need to work their goalie and get the fans behind us.

“If we play to our full potential then we should win. I think the players we have in that dressing-room means that on our day we can beat anyone.”

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