User:سائغ/page6

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Biggest wins

* Four or more goals difference between the teams. Only includes the league and two major cups; other big winning margins were recorded in minor competitions such as the Glasgow Merchants Charity Cup.[1][2][3]

Celtic

6-goal margin

5-goal margin

4-goal margin

  • Celtic 6–2 Rangers on 14 December 1895,
    Scottish Division One
  • Rangers 0–4 Celtic on 27 September 1898 Scottish Division One
  • Celtic 4–0 Rangers on 10 March 1900, Scottish Cup
  • Celtic 4–0 Rangers on 1 January 1914, Scottish Division One
  • Celtic 6–2 Rangers on 10 September 1938, Scottish Division One
  • Celtic 5–1 Rangers on 3 January 1966, Scottish Division One
  • Celtic
    4–0
    Rangers on 26 April 1969, Scottish Cup
  • Celtic 5–1 Rangers on 21 November 1998, Scottish Premier League
  • Celtic 6–2 Rangers on 27 August 2000, Scottish Premier League
  • Celtic 5–1 Rangers on 10 September 2016, Scottish Premiership
  • Rangers 1–5 Celtic on 29 April 2017, Scottish Premiership
  • Celtic 4–0 Rangers on 15 April 2018, Scottish Cup[5]

Rangers

5-goal margin

  • Rangers 5–0 Celtic on 2 September 1893, Scottish League
  • Rangers 5–0 Celtic on 1 January 1894, Scottish Division One

4-goal margin

  • Celtic 0–4 Rangers on 24 September 1898, Scottish Division One
  • Rangers
    4–0
    Celtic on 14 April 1928, Scottish Cup
  • Celtic 0–4 Rangers on 2 January 1948, Scottish League Division A
  • Rangers 4–0 Celtic on 24 September 1949, Scottish League Division A
  • Celtic 0–4 Rangers on 31 August 1955, Scottish League Cup
  • Celtic 1–5 Rangers on 10 September 1960, Scottish Division One
  • Rangers 4–0 Celtic on 1 January 1963, Scottish Division One
  • Rangers 5–1 Celtic on 27 August 1988, Scottish Premier Division
  • Rangers 4–0 Celtic on 26 March 2000, Scottish Premier League
  • Rangers 5–1 Celtic on 26 November 2000, Scottish Premier League

Players

Played for both teams

The ferocity of the rivalry has made it rare for a player to represent both teams during his career.

(none of whom moved directly between the two clubs).

Pre-World War I

Post-World War I

Opposite clubs during youth and senior careers

Families

Several sets of brothers have played in the Old Firm match, although not necessarily together:

Those who were teammates in the fixture include:

In the 1890s, Tom Dunbar spent a season with Rangers between two spells for Celtic, but he and his brother Mick (see above) never played against each other in the fixture. In the 1980s, the McAdam brothers played on opposite sides, and directly against one another, on several occasions: defender Tom for Celtic and forward Colin for Rangers.[48]

Father-and-son pairs who have been selected include:

Jimmy Simpson was a Rangers captain in the 1930s, while his son Ronnie Simpson was Celtic's European Cup-winning goalkeeper in 1967.

Individual records

Most appearances

As of end of the 2018–19 season.

Highest goalscorers

As of end of the 2018–19 season.

  1. ^ Miller scored 9 league goals for Rangers, 1 for Celtic

Managerial statistics

As of 29 August 2021. Minimum 10 Old Firm games as manager.

Name Team Years Overall Record[56][57][58][59] League Record[60][61]
Games Wins Win % Games Wins Win %
Brendan Rodgers Northern Ireland Celtic 2016–2019 13 10 77% 10 7 70%
Steven Gerrard England Rangers 2018–2021 13 8 62% 11 7 64%
Martin O'Neill Northern Ireland Celtic 2000–2005 27 16 59% 20 13 65%
Bill Struth Rangers 1920–1954[a][b] 116 66 57% 54 29 54%
Graeme Souness Rangers 1986–1991 27 14 52% 20 10 50%
Walter Smith Rangers 1991–1998,
2006–2011
56 28 50% 46 22 48%
Jock Stein Celtic 1965–1978 58 29 50% 28 12 43%
Scot Symon Rangers 1954–1967 61 29 48% 27 17 63%
Billy McNeill Celtic 1978–1983,
1987–1991
46 22 48% 36 16 44%
Neil Lennon Northern Ireland Celtic 2010–2014,
2019–2021
19 9 47% 15 7 47%
Gordon Strachan Celtic 2005–2009 18 8 44% 16 6 37%
David White Rangers 1968–1969 10 4 40% 4 3 75%
Jock Wallace
Rangers 1972–1978,
1984–1986
38 15 39% 28 9 32%
Dick Advocaat Netherlands Rangers 1998–2001 16 6 37% 14 5 36%
Alex McLeish Rangers 2002–2006 25 8 32% 18 4 22%
William Wilton Rangers 1899–1920 96 30 31% 42 11 26%
Davie Hay
Celtic 1983–1987 21 6 29% 16 6 37%
Willie Maley Celtic 1897–1940[c] 146 43 29% 84 22 26%
John Greig Rangers 1978–1983 27 7 26% 21 4 19%
Jimmy McGrory Celtic 1945–1965 80 18 22% 38 6 16%
Tommy Burns Celtic 1994-1997 15 3 20% 12 2 17%
Jimmy McStay Celtic 1940–1945[d][e] 21 4 19% 0 0 0%
Liam Brady Republic of Ireland Celtic 1991–1993 11 2 18% 9 2 22%
Willie Waddell Rangers 1970–1972 12 1 8% 5 0 0%
  1. ^ 116 includes 27 unofficial wartime games
  2. ^ 66 includes 19 unofficial wartime games
  3. ^ 146 includes one unofficial wartime game
  4. ^ All 21 are unofficial wartime games
  5. ^ All 4 are unofficial wartime games

Attendances

The

Leeds United, moved to the larger Hampden Park due to the anticipated interest: the crowd of 136,505 is a record for any match in European international club competitions.[66][62]

Hampden,

Old Firm affair,[62] although the tournament record was set in 1947 when Rangers overcame Hibernian in a semi-final before 123,830.[69]

The 1971 Ibrox disaster – in which 66 Rangers supporters died in a crush on an exterior stairway – occurred at the end of an Old Firm match,[63] although the identity of the opposition was not a factor in the incident other than having drawn a large crowd of at least 75,000 to the event.[70]

Since redevelopments completed in the 1990s, all three venues are all-seater with much smaller capacities of between 50,000 and 60,000, meaning the above records may never be beaten – the attendance of 72,069 at 'old style' Hampden for the Old Firm

1989 Scottish Cup Final[71] has become a landmark figure as no match in Scotland has come close to matching it since.[72]

Average attendances

When compared to other clubs in Scotland, the Old Firm maintain considerably higher attendances;[73] Celtic's recorded crowds tend to be higher than Rangers as their stadium holds approximately 9,000 more seats. Both clubs (among others) have been accused of inflating their attendance figures by counting all season ticket holders in the crowd when many have not actually attended the match in question, with the accurate figures reported to the police for crowd control being lower.[74][75]

The average attendances of both Old Firm clubs are regularly within the top twenty across Europe.[76][77] A study of stadium attendance figures from 2013 to 2018 by the CIES Football Observatory ranked Celtic at 16th in the world during that period and Rangers at 18th, even though Rangers had been playing at lower levels for three of those five seasons. Celtic's proportion of the distribution of spectators in Scotland was 36.5%, the highest of any club in the leagues examined, with Rangers' 27.4% placing them 8th overall for national audience share.[78]

Season Celtic Rangers Next Largest
1996–97[79] 47,691 48,122 Aberdeen 12,726
1997–98[80] 48,833 49,357 Hearts 15,343
1998–99[81] 59,233 49,094 Hearts 14,232
1999–2000[82] 54,440 48,116 Hearts 14,246
2000–01[83] 59,369 47,532 Hearts 12,771
2001–02[84] 58,511 47,879 Aberdeen 14,035
2002–03[85] 57,471 48,814 Hearts 12,057
2003–04[86] 57,657 48,992 Hearts 11,947
2004–05[87] 57,906 48,676 Aberdeen 13,576
2005–06[88] 58,149 49,245 Hearts 16,767
2006–07[89] 57,928 49,955 Hearts 16,937
2007–08[90] 57,072 48,946 Hearts 16,288
2008–09[91] 57,671 49,534 Hearts 14,398
2009–10[92] 45,582 47,301 Hearts 14,745
2010–11[93] 48,978 45,305 Hearts 14,228
2011–12[94] 50,904 46,362 Hearts 13,381
2012–13[95] 46,917 45,744[a] Hearts 13,163
2013–14[96] 47,079 42,657[a] Hearts 14,123
2014–15[97] 44,585 32,798[a] Hearts 15,985[a]
2015–16[98] 44,850 45,325[a] Hearts 16,423
2016–17[99] 54,726 49,156 Hearts 16,315
2017–18[100] 57,523 49,174 Hearts 18,429
2018–19[101] 57,778 49,564 Hibernian 17,741
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