The Scotsman

Rodgers denies Griffiths has gone AWOL

- By ANDREW SMITH

Celtic manager Brendan Rodgers has dismissed claims that striker Leigh Griffiths has gone AWOL as social

media “tittle tattle”, writes

Andrew Smith.

Rumours spread online on Thursday night that the Scotland forward had not been seen at the club’s Lennoxtown training base since Monday.

Griffiths opted out of internatio­nal duty with Scotland earlier this month, preferring to stay behind with his club and work on his fitness.

However, he was absent for Saturday’s win over Hibernian with a calf injury and was not part of the travelling party which flew to Germany for Thursday’s Europa League clash with RB Leipzig. He has not played since the win over St Johnstone on 7 October.

“It’s all social media,” said Rodgers as he met the press ahead of tomorrow’s Betfred Cup semi-final against Hearts.

“He hasn’t been well. He didn’t go away with the internatio­nal team, then he got injured and then he has been ill for a number of days now. I spoke to Leigh when we trained at murray field to check on how he was. He’s been ill so he’s been kept away from the squad.

“He has been connecting every day with our head physiother­apist, Tim [Williamson], and he probably gets about 20 messages a day off him, so there’s no chance you’re not connecting with Leigh.

“We just want to get him fit and back into the squad again. He’s away for some more scans today with Tim. So that’s just the way it is sometimes with social media. There’s always a bit of tittle-tattle which runs and takes its own life with these stories. He’s very much in contact with the club.”

A sense of calm after the storm pervaded Brendan Rodgers’ pre-match assessment of Celtic’s Betfred Cup semi-final against Hearts at Murrayfiel­d tomorrow. The seemingly never-ending furore about dates, times, venues and ticket allocation­s for this match and the meeting of Rangers and Aberdeen in the other last-four tie, included a nip from the Parkhead manager who claimed the Edinburgh rugby ground was “certainly not neutral, with Hearts having played there for part of last season”.

Rodgers, always keen to quash any possible distractio­ns before games, rowed back from that sentiment yesterday when asked if there was any issue with the staging of the game in terms of an advantage for Hearts.

“I don’t think so,” said Rodgers, whose players trained at Murrayfiel­d on Tuesday. “My point before was about having the opportunit­y to at least train and be at the stadium. Both teams will have done that but of course Hearts will have played there a little bit more.

“But they are unique occasions and my experience­s of semi-finals up here have been brilliant, great atmosphere­s, and we’ve been able to make the finals, which has been great. So I think it is just going to be a really good occasion, at a beautiful, iconic stadium in Murrayfiel­d. The place will be packed and we will look to try and do what we always do and impose our game and play as well as we can.”

With more than 60,000 expected at Murrayfiel­d – which could see the combined attendance­s for the League Cup semi-finals top the 100,000 mark for the first time since 1965 – the sense of occasion runs deep for Rodgers. More than that, the scale of the fixture could be considered to play into Celtic’s hands given Hearts’ relative inexperien­ce of such occasions.

“It’s what we are used to, in fairness,” Rodgers said. “We have an incredible support base at home and for lots of the games – especially the big European games – we are away travelling to those types of environmen­ts. Of course, the last few years we’ve been at Hampden and it’s going to make for a fantastic spectacle I’m sure. The Scottish supporters up here are so passionate about their football and I think, over the course of the day, you’ll have two games that I’m sure will be a great advert for the game up here.”

Rodgers’ men are unlikely to go into the semi-final with any sense of deflation on the back of their limp Europa League loss in Leipzig on Thursday. They will, though, be depleted, with injuries likely to rule out Jozo Simunovic and Cristian Gamboa. Dedryck Boyata is suspended so Filip Benkovic – who wasn’t risked on Thursday – is expected to form a new centre-back pairing with Jack Hendry.

On the plus side for Rodgers, Tom Rogic, who missed out in Germany with a knee issue, has “a great chance of playing”.

The Australian has been a key performer as the champions have racked up 20 straight domestic cup victories under Rodgers, a run that has yielded two League Cups and two Scottish Cups. Silverware is the currency Rodgers says his club can take to the bank in the face of any debits sustained on the European front and during their patchy league form this season.

“When you work at the top clubs there’s only one standard, and that’s winning,” he said. “That’s what you’re judged by.

“There’s lots of things now in the modern game where you’re judged by social media and Twitter feeds and all that stuff but the real standard for the big clubs is what you put in the trophy cabinet. That comes from the pitch to there. For us, the standard is winning.

“We work to win but we always want to entertain our supporters. This season we’ve been getting towards that in the last couple of games and we’ve been very, very good. It’ll be a tough game at the weekend but we aim to continue with that quality of game in the semi-final.”

BEAUTY CONTEST

“I think it is going to be a really good occasion, at a beautiful, iconic stadium in Murrayfiel­d. It will be packed and we’ll look to try to impose our game”

BRENDAN RODGERS

 ??  ?? Leigh Griffiths has not played for Celtic since the win over St Johnstone on 7 October.
Leigh Griffiths has not played for Celtic since the win over St Johnstone on 7 October.
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