The Scotsman

Celtic’s poor run down to absence of ‘outstandin­g leader’ Mcgregor

- By MARK ATKINSON

The old saying of ‘you don’t know what you’ve got until it’s gone’ can certainly be applied to Callum Mcgregor.

That’s the view of Celtic manager Ange Postecoglo­u, anyway, when he sums up just how important the central midfielder is to his team.

Appointed club captain this summer after long-serving skipper Scott Brown joined Aberdeen,mcgregorha­sbeen trying to drive Celtic’s regenerati­on on the pitch, being Postecoglo­u’s general and helping the transition between old and new.

The 28-year-old, however, missed a tranche of games in September, which coincided with a 4-3 Europa League reversal at Betis and dropped points in the cinch Premiershi­p, a 1-0 defeat at Livingston and a 0-0 home draw with Dundee United. His hamstring injury was managed carefully and he is now back in the team, driving them on to wins – the latest being a 2-0 triumph over Ferencvaro­s to breathe new life into Celtic’s European campaign. Postecoglo­u is left in no doubt how key Mcgregor is.

“I said through that period that we needed to show resilience, but there’s no doubt we missed Cal,” said the Australian coach. “Any team would miss their leader, their skipper, and he’s such a fantastic player apart from that. He dictates the tempo out there, he drives the boys with his actions and his words.

"He’s an outstandin­g leader and I know he will become an even better leader as he grows into the role. He’s definitely an

important part of it, like any leader would be in any team. No-one’s irreplacea­ble, but when you lose influentia­l players like we did during the last period, it’s going to take a toll on a brand-new team. It wasn’t like we had ready-made leaders to step up.”

Postecoglo­u never questioned Mcgregor’s credential­s to take the armband. “Leaders come in different forms,” he said. “He’s probably not the typical, but the biggest thing

you look for in leaders is ‘do people want to follow him?’ Do his actions match his words, does his behaviour match his demands for standards? And he does that. He lives and breathes football, he lives and breathes this football club.

"He took the penalty [against Ferencvaro­s]. That’s his job. He missed it but then he was back up looking for the ball again. That’s leadership for me. His words are very strong to the team before a game and

at half-time. He’s dead set on making this club successful again.

While the Scotland internatio­nalist’s qualities as a captain have impressed his manager, his ability has done so too. “He’s up there … with the ones I’ve worked with anyway,” Postecoglo­u added about how good a player he is. “Because what you look for are players in the tightest of areas – and he plays in that area – who always want the ball, are always looking,

always trying to dictate the game.

"The way we want to play, that’s really important in the middle. He rarely gives the ball away. Nine times out of ten he makes the best decision in terms of the pass. There are plenty of passes you can make, options you can take, but invariably he always makes the right pass. And he works his socks off. So he is a good player, a fantastic player, but he is one I think can improve.”

 ?? ?? Callum Mcgregor missed a penalty against Ferencvaro­s but was immediatel­y looking to atone for the mistake
Callum Mcgregor missed a penalty against Ferencvaro­s but was immediatel­y looking to atone for the mistake

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