_ Trivia
- The club refused to confirm or deny rumours of a £1.5 million offer for AS Roma defender Enrico Annoni.
- 5 games in 16 days was starting to show. Morten Wieghorst was out and required a cartilage op, Phil O’Donnell had a thigh injury, Simon Donnelly was out with a hip injury, and Di Canio was still recovering from his ankle injury.
- Hibs were without regulars Shaun Dennis, John Hughes, Darren Jackson and Keith Wrigh. Ex Celtic man Jim Duffy had just arrived as manager of Hibs taking over from caretaker Jocky Scott.
- Van Hooijdonk was again watched by representatives of West Ham.
Review
An easy win Hibs in a bad state, but for Leighton it could have been a bucket load.
Teams
Celtic:Celtic: :
Kerr; Boyd,
McKinlay,
McNamara,
MacKay,
Hannah,
Hay, McStay,
Van Hooijdonk,
Thom (
McLaughlin, 35),
Cadete.
Non Used Subs:Subs: Grant, GrayScorers:Scorers: Van Hooijdonk (21), McLaughlin (42), Van Hooijdonk (48), Cadete (68)
Hibernian:Hibernian: Leighton, W Miller,
McQuilken (Love ,78 ), Hunter, Welsh,
Elliot, Dow, Grant, Harper, G Miller (Weir ,68 ),
McGinlaySubs not used Cameron,
Scorer:Scorer: Harper (63)
Bookings:Bookings: Miller (Hibernian)
Referee:Referee: A Roy (Aberdeen)
Attendance:Attendance: 49,092
Articles
Pictures
Stats
| Celtic | Hibernian |
| Bookings | 0 | 1 |
| Fouls | 13 | 10 |
| Shots on Target | 16 | 7 |
| Corners | 7 | 3 |
| Offside | 11 | 2 |
Dutchman hammers it home
Scotland on Sunday 19/01/1997
Celtic 4 Hibernian 1
THE
playwright Alan Bennett once worried that despite acclaim he was simply
"adding to the number of words in the world". There have been times in
this championship that Celtic looked like they were just adding to the
number of goals.
Rangers' draw against Kilmarnock last Wednesday
gave these four a greater relevance than some they have bagged of late
and kept renewed optimism bubbling up amid the stands. This mood was
manifest in Celtic Park's best attendance since November and the 50,000
Chinese whispers which attended every scrap of radio news. And no, they
weren't listening in to the rugby at Murrayfield.
Pierre van
Hooijdonk gobbled the greatest portion on an afternoon in which Celtic
played virtually five attackers (two up, three deep), with the peerless
Paul McStay behind, and neither Hibs' defence nor midfield coped. Van
Hooijdonk, it was reported yesterday, blew a 4m move to West Ham in
midweek - verbally agreed but withdrawn after Harry Redknapp saw him
play against Raith Rovers.
However, Hibs proved therapeutic for the
Dutchman and his headed goals were emphatic. By the end some of the old
swagger was back.
One of the difficulties for scouts is surely that,
so excellent is Jorge Cadete at present, it makes the Dutchman look
ordinary. Cadete's was a focal presence in attack and with his ninth
goal in five games and 22nd in 24 matches this season, he even seems
intent on stealing his partner's thunder as regards statistics.
Jim
Duffy still hasn't won since the valedictory six-goal defeat of East
Fife at Dundee and Hibs looked bland. Celtic might have missed Paolo di
Canio, Phil O'Donnell and Alan Stubbs, but the visitors, without Darren
Jackson, suffered the greater loss. Only Kevin Harper and as ever Jim
Leighton were creditable, the former fluttering around uncomfortable
Malky Mackay all afternoon, the latter simply over-employed.
It was a
day bulging with side issues. Hibs, with both Jamie McQuilken and David
Elliot starting on their refitted left, showcased the two new signings
which takes their spending to more than 1m this season.
What do you
get for 1m these days? Nine players bought by different managers if you
follow Easter Road's quirky business strategy. Combined it is doubtful
they are as valuable as Jackson himself (who is probably worth more) the
least of Duffy's problems. There were Jackie McNamaras everywhere:
senior the Hibs assistant manager burning off as many calories in the
'technical area' as junior on the turf.
We also had a brace of
Millers for Hibs, Greg (Alex Miller's son) augmenting Willie in only his
second start for the club. His lively run and left-footer at 1-0 came
as close as anything to changing matters for Hibs.
However, the
central theme was evident from the start. Celtic with strikers as good
and famished as Cadete and Van Hooijdonk merely had to get the ball
quickly into forward areas to menace Hibs. The visitors were already
beleaguered when Van Hooijdonk drove in the opener from a set play.
Andreas Thom touched forward a free-kick 25 yards out and the Dutchman
beat Leighton with an exactness which made a mockery of the range.
Brian
McLaughlin added a second before the interval but the real presence was
Cadete. He is a marvellous thief of goals and space, this Portuguese.
Like few other strikers Cadete can slip in between the last defender and
goalkeeper while remaining onside.
This attribute saw him beat
Leighton to an early back pass and almost poke it in from a tight angle.
And later get behind Brian Welsh to batter a header into the
goalkeeper, flexing those powerful neck muscles of his. More than a
predator, he sends others in for the kill. After David Hannah missed one
of his crosses from a yard out, Cadete one-twoed with McLaughlin for
the winger to capitalise with greater effect, slipping the ball under
Leighton's body.
How Hibs must hate Van Hooijdonk. The Dutchman's
second, a big, steep near-post header means that nine of his 55 goals
for Celtic have come against Hibs.
It was also the seventh
consecutive game in which he has had Leighton rooting about the rigging,
which should make Duffy feel less of a victim.
At least Harper got
the manager one back: an intelligent - not to say unlikely - header
which looped over Stewart Kerr and took some skill to execute.
Cadete
then purloined a fourth for ce. Having gone manno a manno with Leighton
twice and seen both first-time shots saved, he took it round the
goalkeeper on the third occasion and walked it in. The Portuguese then
beckoned more noise from the crowd in that soft metal lead singer way of
his. He clearly loves leading an audience and, the way Celtic Park feel
about him, right now they'd follow anywhere.
Tommy Burns, post match:
"We created a helluva lot of chances and Jim Leighton was outstanding - as were the youngsters.
"Chris
Hay made a really good contribution, Malky MacKay did well once more
and Brian McLaughlin took his goal well and looked very sharp in his
first game in a while.
He has come through a difficult period after losing his mother last month
"Brian's family are very close and it hit them really hard so it was important that we gave him time.
"Now he's looking strong and I was delighted with his attitude and application."
"It
was pleasing to play so well while without the like of Paolo, Alan
Stubbs, Phil O'Donnell, Brian O'Neil, Morten Wieghorst and after losing
Andy Thom so early.
"The lads who came in showed great attitude and
I've told all my squad each and every one of them will be given the
chance to contribute.
"Some more than others, of course, but if a
player comes in and wins three games for us then his input could be as
vital as any player."
Pictures Match Pictures StatsCelticHibernianBookings01Fouls1310Shots on Target167Corners73Offside112