The Scotsman

Celtic aim to ‘put things right’ in Old Firm derby

- By ANDREW SMITH Celtic’s best XI for Sunday (4-2-3-1): Bain; Kenny, Welsh, Ajer, Laxalt; Brown, Soro; Christie, Turnbull, Mcgregor; Edouard.

John Kennedy wants Celtic to remind Rangers they have not gone away when they face the new champions at Parkhead on Sunday.

The Ibrox side recently clinched their 55th topflight title and in doing so scuppered Celtic’s hopes of making it a record-breaking 10 in a row.

Interim boss Kennedy is keen for Celtic to put down a marker against their Old Firm rivals, whom they trail by 20 points in second place.

He told Celtic TV: "It is very important to everyone, the fans, the club, the players themselves. Everyone knows what it means.

"It is not, because the league is done, a nothing game, it is a game in its own right, it is a derby match and one in which we want to put things right.

"We know we have underachie­ved in recent (derby) games, especially the last game (a 1-0 defeat at Ibrox), where we thought it was a good performanc­e and then we went down to 10 men and lost the game.

"But that gives us confidence that we can impose our style and win the game which is the most important thing because, again, we might have lost the league title, but we are certainly not away, we are still striving to get back to being the best team in the country."

It feels like every plotline for Celtic can be framed in the negative when it comes to Sunday’s derby.

With the title gone, their mainaimist­opreventne­wlycrowned champions Rangers going through the whole league campaign unbeaten - a once-a-century feat when Brendan Rodgers’ Celtic did it in 2016-17. Beyond that, the Parkhead side will be looking to avoid three straight home defeats against their bitter rivals for the first time in 29 years, and ensure they do not lose the first three league meetings between the Glasgow leviathans since the 1996-97 season.

Celtic interim manager John Kennedy must be willing to embrace positivity, though, in effecting a team change for an encounter that retains huge significan­ce. Apart from the outcome and Nir Bitton’s momentumal­tering needless red card the last time the teams met in January, there was little wrong with Celtic’s display at Ibrox. They comprehens­ively outplayed their hosts… to the extent the game is the only one in the past decade in which Rangers failed to fashion a single shot on target.

Celtic’s loss as the result of a Callum Mcgregor own goal was punishment for a series of missed chances. That afternoon, they operated with a twin strikeforc­e, and a midfield diamond. Frankly, with no forward but Odsonne Edouard justifying a start on Sunday, Kennedy should be open to tweaking that formation while retaining key elements.

Ismaila Soro operated impressive­ly at the base of the diamond for his first experience of the fixture, but the Ivorian has since made way for Scott Brown. The game management of the Celtic veteran across the past two months has demonstrat­ed his continued value. Yet an assignment against Rangers represents a step-up in intensity. The confrontat­ion can be considered akin to those in Europe, wherein the 35-year-old’s inability to cover the ground as quickly as in his prime has engendered issues. The more fleetfoote­d but less naturally physical Soro can, then, be Brown’s foil.

The two players have never started together for Celtic. Fielding them as effectivel­y double-anchors would allow Kennedy to set his team out in an enterprisi­ng 4-2-3-1. In this configurat­ion, ahead of the Brown-soro axis would be David Turnbull, pictured, flanked by Ryan Christie and Mcgregor to the right and left of him, respective­ly. This would replicate an attack line that had so much joy pinning Rangers in last time, and one propelled by the industry Christie and Mcgregor offered in wider roles.

The extra insurance offered by linking Brown and Soro would allow Turnbull to push up and play in and around Edouard. The slick interplay between the 21-year-old and the Frenchman - Celtic’s two principal goal sources in 2021 - has been one of the more progressiv­e facets of the deposed champions’ stuttering form of late.

The 4-2-3-1 allows for flexibilit­y and, off course, represents the system with which Celtic stormed to a first modern-day unbeaten league campaign. The uniqueness of which they should be now hell-bent on preserving.

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