Daily Record

MONSTERS SYNC

Hoops have 13 games in 42 days before the World Cup and Ange will be demanding another winning streak

- CHRIS SUTTON CELTIC LEGEND WRITES EXCLUSIVEL­Y FOR YOU EVERY WEEK

JURGEN KLOPP once called his Liverpool team mentality monsters.

That’s what Ange Postecoglo­u’s Celtic stars have been for him.

Ruthless attitudes. Coping with absences while gaining results in must-win games. No let up. It has been done at this key point of a season before by the Aussie’s squad and now their challenge is to do it all over again.

There are 13 games for them in 43 days across three competitio­ns before the World Cup and it’s time to once more display the mentality that’s got them where they are now.

You cannot win cups and titles in this next pivotal period. But being off the pace or making too many mistakes can certainly take them away from you. It will shape what comes next.

In the 13 games from this day in 2021, Celtic won eight and drew one of nine in the Premiershi­p, booked a spot in the Premier Sports Cup Final and beat Ferencvaro­s home and away in Europe.

The only reverse came in Germany against Leverkusen and even that was a good performanc­e in defeat.

Another powerful run of that nature is now required.

Postecoglo­u will have started assembling his group back together from the internatio­nal break and he might not like some of the things he sees. Some boys, such as Cameron Carter-Vickers and Carl Starfelt, didn’t even go away because they were injured.

Others such as Giorgos Giakoumaki­s and David Turnbull have sustained knocks so Postecoglo­u will have some absences.

Some of the lads will come back flying. Callum McGregor, for example, must be buzzing after Scotland’s performanc­es.

It would be remiss of me not to make mention of the Celtic captain for his internatio­nal displays.

It actually surprised me during the week to find out that, at the age of 29, McGregor only has 49 caps.

I say only. Forty-nine caps is still a big number. It’s 48 more than I got.

But when you look at the way he performs on that stage, he’s class. McGregor is an outstandin­g footballer and brings a measure of composure and authority to the midfield that few in the squad can.

He’s now becoming as invaluable to Steve Clarke as he is to Postecoglo­u and that’s saying something.

McGregor will get right back to business and he’ll lead the way. Others might not be in his form or even fitness but there are no excuses. In fairness to him, if there’s one manager who doesn’t make any, it’s Postecoglo­u. That attitude rubs off on his players and it has to keep doing so.

Celtic were in far worse shape as a squad last season at this stage and they managed to navigate their way through the same pivotal spell.

Now they have a stronger squad and the Hoops boss has more choices due to the club’s work in the last two transfer windows.

While it’s a punishing programme for Celtic, it is the same for Rangers.

They are both involved in the Champions League and most nations in Europe are

cramming fixtures into this period because they are having to deal with the November World Cup date.

We Never Stop is the mantra from Postecoglo­u but it should be that we need to get restarted after that slip at St Mirren.

I’ve said on these pages Celtic could be excused an off-day and a defeat. Their fine start to the term and thumping Old Firm success had put them into a place where they could afford a setback.

Maybe that was part of the problem in Paisley. I certainly don’t think if Postecoglo­u could pick a team again for the game, he would make as many changes.

But perhaps the lack of edge that brought about the lacklustre opening to the match from which Celtic did not recover was also more of a factor. Let’s face it, pretty much since he walked in the door, the manager’s team had been playing on the edge.

They’ve been, by and large, going into every game knowing they couldn’t afford to make a mistake, especially in the Premiershi­p.

They were six points behind at this stage last season. Even then, every outing was a must win and they played like it.

Nothing was left out there, Celtic fired into everything on the domestic front and that might just be the way they need to be. They might be off the top of the table by the time they kick-off against Motherwell today, so it’s back to being on the edge.

During October and November last season, Celtic managed those back-to-back triumphs over Ferencvaro­s

which gave them a chance to get through their Europa League group. It didn’t happen but now, going up a level in the Champions League against RB Leipzig, it’s a similar set of circumstan­ces.

Home and away matches which could make or break their chances of progressio­n to the knockout phase.

Celtic currently hold the Premier Sports Cup and Postecoglo­u admits it was such an important one for him to win last season to fuel the belief.

They will want to retain it so going to Fir Park in the last eight means it’s not just the title race and the Champions League that must hold attention.

There are no margins for error. As I said, St Mirren was excused because of what had gone before but the next domestic slip won’t be glossed over so readily if it comes soon. Of course, this is what you want. These are the games you want to be involved in and the situations you want to be part of. I loved them. High pressure. Win and you’re flying, lose and there are consequenc­es. The Celtic players showed last year they could handle those high-stakes matches and strains. Now they are back in the same place. And the message from the manager will be simple. Do it all again and set yourself up for more success.

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 ?? ?? SAINTS TO WINNERS Ange Postecoglo­u’s Celtic players must prove the loss at St Mirren was a blip and Callum McGregor, inset, can take leading role in new run
SAINTS TO WINNERS Ange Postecoglo­u’s Celtic players must prove the loss at St Mirren was a blip and Callum McGregor, inset, can take leading role in new run

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