ANDY Walker believes Celtic’s players stand on the verge of a ‘once-in-a-lifetime’ achievement by completing a treble-winning season domestically unbeaten.
Under Brendan Rodgers, the Premiership and Betfred Cup winners have now gone 40 games in Scotland without suffering the angst of defeat, bringing them to a mouth-watering meeting with Rangers in the William Hill Scottish Cup semi-final on Sunday.
Potentially just two more matches stand between Rodgers and a treble, while only five more Premiership games added to that would complete a campaign with a big fat zero in the losses column next to the Parkhead side.
Walker was part of a Celtic side that went frighteningly close to achieving an unbeaten season. Back in 1995/96, Tommy Burns took his team to within four points of Premier Division winners Rangers on the back of season that saw just one defeat, which poetically came against their Ibrox foes. If that 2-0 win at Parkhead for Rangers had gone the other way, it would have been green and white ribbons around the trophy instead of red, white and blue.
Success and silverware has already been achieved 21 years on by the current class. But greatness, according to Walker, is now within reach.
“It’s their biggest game of the season of course because it’s the next game. There is a winner on the day and if you win it by whatever means the treble is still alive. And the fact Celtic would still remain unbeaten you are looking at a potential once in a lifetime experience for the players.
“I don’t know if anyone would come close to being involved again in a team that could go through a whole season undefeated. It really would be quite remarkable,” he said.
It’s clear that any real resistance must come from a stronger Rangers. How Aberdeen can improve or get closer to the Premiership champions given their ever-contrasting budgets looks about as clear as pea soup, while the arrival of Pedro Caixinha has brought a breath of fresh air at Ibrox, if not a gust of crisp banknotes from the boardroom just yet.
However, even with an anticipated increase in challenge from across the city after the summer and even on Sunday, it’s hard to imagine Glasgow being anything other than green and white for the foreseeable future.
“It’s not a matter of me thinking it, It’s a fact Rangers haven’t been competitive for the title this year but realistically in the longer term they are the only ones to push Celtic,” said Walker.
“Look at the titles Celtic have won over the last few years and they have stuttered and stumbled their way to it. Not this year. They’ve won this with a bit of style and there is a chance of this being a special season.
“It’s still very much on. We are in the middle of April and we’ve been asking the question since November. They keep coming up with the answers.”
Beyond Celtic’s Scottish Cup campaign, whether that stops on Sunday or in May’s final, the attention will turn sharply to the Champions League qualifiers which will begin in the early days of July. Even though eventual qualification for the knockout stage will only add to Celtic’s wealth and therefore put them further out of the reach of their rivals, Walker insists it is still a positive for the Scottish game as it tries to rejuvenate itself.
“These games are so important to Celtic and Scottish football,” said Walker of the qualifiers. “They define your season. It’s up to Rangers and other to lift their game. If Celtic can drag them along and make them better I believe Scottish football will benefit from it.”
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