2000-10-17: St Johnstone 0-2 Celtic, Premier LeagueThis is a featured page

Match Pictures | Matches: 2000 - 2001 | 2000-2001 Pictures

Trivia

  • The club confirmed the signing of goalkeeper Robert Douglas from Dundee for £1.5million and a five year contract to June 2005. The deal had been slightly delayed due to the late return of Martin O’Neill from France, where he had been watching the UEFA Cup opponents Bordeaux.

Review

A decent win saw the Bhoys stretch the lead at the top to 5 points. The game played in incessant rain was treacherous with their being doubts as to whether it would go ahead.

Teams

St Johnstone
Main, Dods, Bollan, Weir, Kernaghan, Dasovic, Kane, Sylla (Malcolm 40), Parker, Evers, Connolly (Hartley 74).
Subs Not Used: Cuthbert, Lovenkrands, McBride.

Celtic
Gould, Boyd, Valgaeren, Mjallby, Thompson, Lambert, Petta, Agathe, Petrov (Healy 72), Larsson, Sutton.
Subs Not Used: Kerr, Berkovic, Moravcik, Riseth.
Goals: Valgaeren 42, Larsson 86 pen.

Booked: Sylla, Weir, Parker, Bollan, Kernaghan, Main, Hartley (St Johnstone) Petrov, Larsson (Celtic)
Sent Off: Malcolm (83) (St Johnstone

Referee: J Rowbotham (Scotland).

Attendance: 8,946

Articles

  • Match Report

Celtic goals go in two by two

The Scotsman 18/10/2000
Jonathan Coates


St Johnstone 0 Celtic 2

CELTIC remain on song result-wise, but this latest victory was no exhibition of class, rather a Noah's Ark-style triumph over adversity.
The league leaders are now five points clear and, more significantly, nine ahead of chief rivals Rangers. Joos Valgaeren put them in front just before half-time but near monsoon conditions led the game down the slippery slope to footballing farce, and as the frustration grew St Johnstone threw the game away.
Substitute Stuart Malcolm was given his marching orders for a stiff arm into the face of Johan Mjallby, off the ball when Celtic were taking an indirect free-kick in the St Johnstone penalty area, and soon afterwards Celtic made the advantage tell when Bobby Petta was upended by Alan Kerneghan in the same box and Henrik Larsson applied the finish from the penalty spot.
Celtic kept faith with Didier Agathe on the right flank after his swashbuckling display in the 2-0 victory over St Mirren on Saturday, and recalled Petta from suspension, at the expense of Lubomir Moravcik, on the opposite side.
St Johnstone gave a first start to attacking midfielder Sean Evers, on loan from Reading, in preference to the more celebrated talents on the bench, Paul Hartley and Tommy Lovenkrands. Evers started aggressively, scything down Paul Lambert near the halfway line and becoming the first player of many to use the slippery conditions for his own poor timing.
It was a scrappy start in Perth, and Celtic almost won a penalty within five minutes, when Petta jinked past Momo Sylla and appeared to catch the French right-back's trailing leg. However, the contact was minimal and Petta's fall gradual enough to dissuade John Rowbotham from blowing his whistle and laying the foundations for a rout.
However, Sylla's force was felt more heavily by Tom Boyd soon after, when the Frenchman was booked for a wild lunge on the Celtic captain. For different reasons, both goalkeepers were under the spotlight last night, Jonathan Gould for the looming threat to his place from likely new signing Robert Douglas, and Alan Main after conceding four goals at the weekend. Main's confidence was the first to come into question, when he tentatively clutched at a long-range shot by Lambert which was heading into the corner of the net.
As St Johnstone began to present the league leaders with their chances, Weir bundled over a fleeting Petta on the edge of the box in the 22nd minute, and was booked for his trouble.
Then it was Larsson's turn to reach the edge of the box at pace, but this time a fine intervention from Darren Dods prevented the opening goal. After much clumsiness, Saints' first opportunity arrived when Evers sighted a good run into the box by Gary Bollan, who struck a decent effort from the left which Gould blocked.
An impish moment of skill arrived when Keigan Parker beat Agathe and Mjallby wide on the left, and squared for Paddy Connolly, but Parker was deemed to have taken the ball over the by-line.
In these kind of conditions, it is not uncommon for the more skilful players to drift out of the game, and while Petta prospered on the left, Agathe made less impact on the right, although Bollan must receive some credit for his no-nonsense marshalling.
As on Saturday at Parkhead, it took a set-piece for Celtic to create their lead. When Petta was adjudged to have been fouled by Malcolm, who had just come on for Sylla, Alan Thompson placed the free-kick onto the head of onrushing Valgaeren, who found the top left-hand corner of Main's net.
Celtic came out after the interval with the clear intention to kill the game and as Larsson began to get more involved and the pitch began to submerge it seemed as if Saints might be swamped, but they remained largely composed except for some moments of panic that came due to the increasingly hazardous surface.
There was slipping and sliding aplenty and Paul Kane almost sank in helplessness when he lost his footing in front of his own area allowing Thompson to run through and drive narrowly wide.
The home side were less attacking but no less efficient than their illustrious guests and Nick Dasovic forced his way into space to head an Evers free kick at Gould who was relieved to see the ball bounce truly into his arms.
Rowbotham had no shortage of cautions to hand out. The most spectacular foul being a Parker slide that upended Valgaeren.
It was the worst of a bad bunch and had the conditions not been taken into account we may have seen red earlier than we did.
Substitute Paul Hartley became the next man in the book for another bad tackle on Petta and Larsson was booked for hand ball as both sets of fans wanted the whistle blown to end an eventful if not farcical night.
Celtic's openings became more frequent, Sutton surprising Main with a testing snap-shot and Larsson heading just wide from a Thompson free kick.
But again Saints refused to drown in peace and when Evers almost connected with a juicy cross at the near post with Boyd on his backside, previously furlorn visions of the draw swung back into reality.
The injustice of such a result would have been perceived as a travesty by Celtic arguing that the conditions were unplayable, but the excess water provided St Johnstone with no unfair advantage, except of course that they were more able than Celtic to play their natural game.

PA Sport Match Report

  • Manager Interview
Martin O’Neill post match:
"I'd have been disappointed if it had been called off when we were ahead.
"It's a game we could have dropped points in. Rangers are capable of winning their matches in hand and there's miles to go yet.
"The conditions were very difficult and in the end we just had to dig in to win, which we did.'
"If you told me at the start of the season we would be in that position I would have smiled at you."

Pictures


Stats

St Johnstone Celtic
Bookings 7 2
Red Cards 1 0
Fouls 18 12
Shots on Target 3 12
Corners 1 5
Offside 2 3





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