The Scotsman

Old Bhoys back Celtic to assert Glasgow derby dominance in Hampden semi

● Old Firm select XI would be entirely Celtic, insists Donnelly ● 2016 Scottish Cup defeat did Celtic a favour, admits Boyd

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couldn’t get the better of the other. Between 1995 and 1997, as Rangers under Walter Smith homed in on a ninein-a-row run of titles, Celtic couldn’t buy a win in the fixture for almost two years.

Donnelly played in eight of the winless nine consecutiv­e derbies for Celtic – three of them drawn. The brittlenes­s that then seemed to leave Tommy Burns’ often brightlype­rforming side feeling permanentl­y bedevilled in the fixture, he detected in Rangers five weeks ago. Their 3-2 loss to Celtic on that occasion – having led twice and held a man advantage for almost half an hour, and with Alfredo Morelos missing from two yards out at the close – could only engender that.

“Celtic managed the game like champions and did really well,” Donnelly said. “Back in the 1990s, when Rangers had a hold over us, it didn’t take a lot to dent confidence. How many times did a Celtic side back then play well and Rangers would go up the park and score and you’d think ‘ here we go again’?

“That looked like what happened to Rangers. They were pegged back twice and right on half-time, too. They’d be asking themselves ‘how do we beat this team?’ Celtic are behaving like champions. They also still have the quality players which Rangers don’t have.”

Yet despite that gulf between the teams, those of a Rangers dispositio­n talked up their prospects before that league derby. Donnelly’s 1990s Celtic team-mate Tom Boyd feels they did so alltoo-much, Graeme Murty revealing his players had cheered drawing Celtic in the semi-final not an admission that seemed to serve him or his players particular­ly well. “I would hope so,” said the now Celtic ambassador Boyd over the possibilit­y of the manner of that Ibrox defeat affecting Rangers in the semi. “I certainly don’t think they’ll be as cocky going into that one as they were the last time out. They won’t be cheering about the prospect of facing Celtic like they were when the draw was made. As long as Celtic turn up for this one, they have a great chance of going through to the final.”

The last time a double/treble chasing Celtic didn’t go through to a final was also Rangers’ last success over their bitter rivals. Yet, with the Rangers directors’ goal celebratio­ns during the Ibrox men’s 2016 Scottish Cup semi-final shoot-out triumph accepted as the catalyst for Celtic’s major shareholde­r Dermot Desmond upping the ante to pursue Brendan Rodgers, Boyd doesn’t regret that afternoon, on reflection.

“We can thank that game for happening,” he said. “There is always a ray of sunshine when you are depressed. It didn’t feel like it at the time but the light at the end of the tunnel

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