The Scotsman

Celtic may get group stage ‘guarantee’

● Reinvigora­ted Irishman happy to play an ever bigger role at business end of the season

- By MARK WALKER

Celtic could be guaranteed achampions­leaguegrou­p stage place every year under a plan which would grant wild card entries for clubs with “great historical importance to football”.

The current format for Europe’s top club competitio­n is set to change, and a variety of new formats have been proposed.

Reports in the Netherland­s have suggested that a new format has been proposed by Europe’s elite clubs which would see four Champions League groups of eight clubs each, meaning extra revenue for every club.

The top four teams would qualify for the knockout phase, the bottom club would be relegated and the remainder go into the Europa League. Matches could also be played on some weekends.

But crucially, the proposal includes granting wild cards to clubs of historical importance in European football.

That would mean Celtic – the first British club to win the European Cup in 1967 – would be granted a spot in the new format. But the proposal could also limit the route to the new Champions League to countries outwith England, Spain, Italy and Germany.

Jacco Swart, director of the Associatio­n of European Profession­al Football

Dealing with the onerous expectatio­ns of playing for Celtic can take many forms. Jonny Hayes is now earning more regular game time than at any previous stage of his near two years in Glasgow. But the palpitatio­ns the winger felt ahead of starting in Sunday’s Scottish Cup semi-final victory over former club Aberdeen were not related to the club’s treble treble pursuit, but rather family demands. Specifical­ly those made by his fouryear-old son Jackson, via a video message.

“My wife sent me one just before the game, and it was the little fella saying ‘make sure you win, I want to go to the final’,” the Republic of Ireland internatio­nal said.

“She had taken him to the safari park for the day. That was probably the biggest pressure I’ve had in a game, thinking about him… I walked in the door on Sunday evening and he was sitting there in his Celtic kit ready to go. Five weeks early. He’s Celtic daft and he absolutely loves it. And he’ll definitely be there, he’s guaranteed a ticket.”

Hayes is guaranteed a more than decent chance of making Neil Lennon’s selection for that historic occasion. In the final weeks of the Brendan Rodgers era, and in the two months that have followed under the interim manager, he has been a player renewed. The 31-yearold

0 Back to full fitness after a long injury lay-off, Jonny Hayes is on song for Celtic, who are hosting their own festival at the SEC in July.

has at last put his struggles for outings behind him, following a leg break in December 2017.

Until this year, Hayes was largely a bench warmer, or deployed as an auxiliary leftback or wing-back, with his favoured wide left position the preserve of Scott Sinclair. For the semi-final, and the recent win over Rangers that has placed an eighth straight title within their grasp, the roles were reversed. It was not lost on Hayes that he made the starting line-up for Hampden, with Tom Rogic, Oliver Ntcham and Sinclair required to settle for places on the substitute­s’ bench.

“Football, first and foremost, is about enjoyment and that’s enjoyable for me,” he said of earning his selection for big games.“we’reinaresul­ts-driven business and we are under pressure to win every week but that factor has to come into it

and it’s always more enjoyable when you’re in the team.

“I’ve been back there for the last couple of games but I can’t remember the last time I played as a left-winger before that. Again, I’m just happy to be involved at all, especially after coming back from injury. When you’re picked to play in big games in Scotland, it gives you the belief that you’re doing something right.

“It’s a sign the manager has a bit of trust in me and that gives me confidence. I don’t think you’ll see a stronger bench in Scotland than ours and that’ll be the case for the foresee

able future due to the quality we have. The previous manager built a 30-strong squad so that any one of us can step in and play when required, but the good thing is you can see how strong the togetherne­ss is when we win trophies. After big games everyone celebrates together and no-one is left out. It’s never been about the 11 or the 14 who get on the pitch.”

That sense of squad equality means Hayes doesn’t feel so very different about the potential of playing his part in closing in on another title – which would be clinched if Rangers drop points against Hearts tomorrow and Celtic then win at Easter Road on Sunday – than when he was in the background recuperati­ng from his leg break as the double treble was snared a year ago.

Yet, Lennon’s input has certainly allowed him to be more expressive on the pitch. “I remember a couple of years

ago when I was at Aberdeen and I wasn’t playing particular­ly well. [Manager] Derek Mcinnes took me aside and said: ‘No matter what happens, you’re going to start the next half-dozen games to build your confidence and give you some momentum.’ Attacking players need that kind of backing. You can see how well Odsonne Edouard is doing now and that’s because he’s playing regularly.

“One of the things I have to give our manager credit for is that he’s given us a little more freedom [than Brendan Rodgers]. You still need to go out and produce, of course; you can’t keep losing the ball– but he encourages you to make things happen. Then, if you do get caught in possession, he urges you to get back on the ball again and make it work the next time. But you better make it work sooner rather than later…”

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